A194 EARLY LIFE WESTERN-TYPE DIET ACCELERATES THE ONSET OF MURINE IL-10 KO COLITIS
M Ren, A Luchak, C Dang, D Philpott, K Croitoru

TL;DR
Feeding a western-type diet to mice during early life increases their risk of developing intestinal inflammation later, possibly due to changes in gut bacteria and immune responses.
Contribution
This study shows that early life western-type diet uniquely increases long-term intestinal inflammation in IL-10 KO mice through persistent microbiome changes and immune dysregulation.
Findings
Early life western-type diet increases inflammation markers and colon damage in IL-10 KO mice.
eWD-fed mice show higher proportions of inflammatory T-cells and proinflammatory cytokine gene expression.
Specific gut taxa persistently colonize eWD-fed mice and correlate with inflammation markers.
Abstract
Early life is a critical time for gut microbiome and immune development, including the establishment of proper host-microbe interactions. While exposures to western world environmental factors are associated with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) susceptibility, the link between environment in early life and later disease onset is unclear. One of the most important western world environmental factors is diet, which can distinctly alter the gut microbiome. We believe an early life western-type diet (WD) can affect disease progression in a murine IL-10 KO colitis model through dysregulated T-cell responses against the microbiome. We aimed to characterize how an early life WD given to IL-10 KO mice would affect colitis development and the gut microbiome. IL-10 KO mice were housed in specific pathogen free conditions and fed normal chow (NC) or WD ad libitum, either between days 10 to 35…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicroscopic Colitis · Digestive system and related health · Clinical Nutrition and Gastroenterology
