SER-287, AN INVESTIGATIONAL MICROBIOME THERAPEUTIC FOR PATIENTS WITH ACTIVE MILD-TO-MODERATE ULCERATIVE COLITIS, PRODUCES REMISSION ASSOCIATED METABOLITES, REDUCES INTESTINAL EPITHELIAL IL-8 SECRETION AND PROTECTS EPITHELIAL BARRIER FUNCTION IN VITRO

  • Martínez A
  • Balasubramanian D
  • Piña A
  • et al.
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Abstract

Background: In a Phase 1b study of mild-to-moderate ulcerative colitis (UC) (Henn et al. Gastro 2020), oral daily dosing of SER-287, a purified consortium of Firmicutes spores administered after vancomycin pre-conditioning, led to significantly higher rates of clinical remission compared to placebo (40% versus 0%, respectively; p=0.024). Engraftment, defined as SER-287 spore germination and growth of metabolically-active bacteria, was associated with remission and shifts in disease relevant microbe-associated metabolites. To better understand the mechanism underlying these favorable clinical observations, we evaluated metabolite production by SER-287 and their impact on specific inflammatory pathways and barrier epithelial integrity in vitro. Method(s): Three SER-287 lots and a negative control pro-inflammatory consortium including three strains isolated from UC subjects (Escherichia coli, Bifidobacterium dentium, and Streptococcus parasanguinis) were grown in vitro in a complex medium designed to mimic the nutrient composition found in the human colon. Culture supernatants were assessed for the presence of anti-inflammatory and remission associated metabolites by GC-MS or LC-MS. Anti-and pro-inflammatory activities were determined by measuring IL-8 secretion, an inflammatory cytokine whose expression is elevated in UC patients, by HT29 epithelial cells after incubation with bacterial supernatants in the presence or absence of TNF-alpha. Epithelial integrity was assayed by measuring FITC-dextran leakage in a trans-well culture of differentiated primary human colonic epithelial cells challenged with IFN-gamma in the presence or absence of culture supernatants. Result(s): When cultured in vitro, all SER-287 lots tested produced the anti-inflammatory short-chain fatty acids butyrate and propionate and other metabolites associated with remission in the Phase 1b trial, including tryptophan metabolites, bile acids and medium-chain fatty acids. SER-287 culture supernatants significantly reduced IL-8 secretion in TNF-alpha stimulated HT29 cells while the pro-inflammatory consortium increased IL-8 secretion compared to TNF-alpha alone (Figure 1A). SER-287 lots induced minimal IL-8 secretion in the absence of TNF-alpha while the pro-inflammatory consortium strongly induced IL-8 (Figure 1B). SER-287 supernatants significantly decreased IFN-gamma-mediated barrier disruption, while the pro-inflammatory consortium was not protective (Figure 2). Conclusion(s): Production of remission-associated metabolites, reduction of epithelial inflammation, and protection from epithelial barrier damage are shown to be pharmacological properties of SER-287 which may underlie the mechanism of action of this microbiome therapeutic for mild-to-moderate UC.

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Martínez, A., Balasubramanian, D., Piña, A., Kieser, K., Narendar, P., Abdulaziz, A., … Henn, M. (2021). SER-287, AN INVESTIGATIONAL MICROBIOME THERAPEUTIC FOR PATIENTS WITH ACTIVE MILD-TO-MODERATE ULCERATIVE COLITIS, PRODUCES REMISSION ASSOCIATED METABOLITES, REDUCES INTESTINAL EPITHELIAL IL-8 SECRETION AND PROTECTS EPITHELIAL BARRIER FUNCTION IN VITRO. Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, 27(Supplement_1), S41–S42. https://doi.org/10.1093/ibd/izaa347.102

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