Intestinal microbiome adjusts the innate immune setpoint during colonization through negative regulation of MyD88

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Abstract

Host pathways mediating changes in immune states elicited by intestinal microbial colonization are incompletely characterized. Here we describe alterations of the host immune state induced by colonization of germ-free zebrafish larvae with an intestinal microbial community or single bacterial species. We show that microbiota-induced changes in intestinal leukocyte subsets and whole-body host gene expression are dependent on the innate immune adaptor gene myd88. Similar patterns of gene expression are elicited by colonization with conventional microbiome, as well as mono-colonization with two different zebrafish commensal bacterial strains. By studying loss-of-function myd88 mutants, we find that colonization suppresses Myd88 at the mRNA level. Tlr2 is essential for microbiota-induced effects on myd88 transcription and intestinal immune cell composition.

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Koch, B. E. V., Yang, S., Lamers, G., Stougaard, J., & Spaink, H. P. (2018). Intestinal microbiome adjusts the innate immune setpoint during colonization through negative regulation of MyD88. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-06658-4

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