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Diet-microbiome interactions promote enteric nervous system resilience following spinal cord injury.


ABSTRACT: Spinal cord injury (SCI) results in numerous systemic dysfunctions, including intestinal dysmotility and enteric nervous system (ENS) atrophy. The ENS has capacity to recover following perturbation, yet intestinal pathologies persist. With emerging evidence demonstrating SCI-induced alterations to gut microbiome composition, we hypothesized that microbiome modulation contributes to post-injury enteric recovery. Here, we show that intervention with the dietary fiber, inulin, prevents SCI-induced ENS atrophy and dysmotility in mice. While SCI-associated microbiomes and specific injury-sensitive gut microbes are not sufficient to modulate intestinal dysmotility after injury, intervention with microbially-derived short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) metabolites prevents ENS dysfunctions in injured mice. Notably, inulin-mediated resilience is dependent on IL-10 signaling, highlighting a critical diet-microbiome-immune axis that promotes ENS resilience post-injury. Overall, we demonstrate that diet and microbially-derived signals distinctly impact ENS survival after traumatic spinal injury and represent a foundation to uncover etiological mechanisms and future therapeutics for SCI-induced neurogenic bowel.

SUBMITTER: Hamilton AM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC11362535 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Diet-microbiome interactions promote enteric nervous system resilience following spinal cord injury.

Hamilton Adam M AM   Blackmer-Raynolds Lisa L   Li Yaqing Y   Kelly Sean D SD   Kebede Nardos N   Williams Anna E AE   Chang Jianjun J   Garraway Sandra M SM   Srinivasan Shanthi S   Sampson Timothy R TR  

NPJ biofilms and microbiomes 20240829 1


Spinal cord injury (SCI) results in numerous systemic dysfunctions, including intestinal dysmotility and enteric nervous system (ENS) atrophy. The ENS has capacity to recover following perturbation, yet intestinal pathologies persist. With emerging evidence demonstrating SCI-induced alterations to gut microbiome composition, we hypothesized that microbiome modulation contributes to post-injury enteric recovery. Here, we show that intervention with the dietary fiber, inulin, prevents SCI-induced  ...[more]

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