A45 ASSESSING THE ROLE OF MICROBIOTA DYSBIOSIS ON INTESTINAL TUFT CELL FUNCTIONS UPON GIARDIA INFECTION
O Sosnowski, T Allain, D McKay, A G Buret

TL;DR
This study explores how gut microbiota and Giardia infection interact with intestinal tuft cells, revealing that microbiota from tuft cell-deficient mice may limit Giardia infection.
Contribution
The study reveals that the gut microbiota from tuft cell-deficient mice may partially limit Giardia infection, and that Giardia-modified microbiota does not drive tuft cell hyperplasia.
Findings
Fecal microbiota transfer from Pou2f3-/- mice improved weight gain during Giardia infection.
Giardia-modified microbiota did not induce tuft or goblet cell hyperplasia or gene expression changes.
Intestinal motility parameters were altered in mice receiving microbiota from Pou2f3-/- mice.
Abstract
Enteric tuft cells can detect and respond to intestinal parasitic infection by modulating host responses to aid parasite clearance, yet the extent of tuft cell functions upon other infections remains to be elucidated. Previous work in our lab showed that the enteric protozoan parasite Giardia induced tuft and goblet cell hyperplasia, yet Giardia colonization in Pou2f3-/- (tuft cell-deficient) mice was impaired. Not only can Giardia modulate the gut microbiota and lead to microbial dysbiosis, but the microbiota itself can influence Giardia colonization. Interestingly, certain microbiota-derived products can activate tuft cells in the gut. In this study, we investigated the role of microbiota dysbiosis in the crosstalk between Giardia and tuft cells. We aim to explore the bidirectional effects between tuft cells and Giardia infection by investigating the role of 1) the host microbiota…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNutrition, Health and Food Behavior
