Abstract
Micronutrient deficiency is a major cause of disease throughout the world. Yet, how perturbations influence the immune-microbiome interface remains poorly understood. Here, we report that loss of dietary tryptophan (Trp) reshapes intestinal microbial communities, including the depletion of probiotic L. reuteri, drives transcriptional changes to immune response genes in the intestinal ileum, and reshapes the regulatory T cell (Treg) compartment. Dietary Trp deficiency promotes expansion of RORγt+ Treg cells and the loss of Gata3+ Tregs in a microbiota-dependent manner. In the absence of dietary Trp, provision of the AhR ligand indole-3-carbinol is sufficient to restore the Treg compartment. Together, these data show that dietary Trp deficiency perturbs the interaction between the host and its bacterial symbionts to regulate Treg homeostasis via the deprivation of bacterially derived Trp metabolites. Our findings highlight an essential role for immune-microbiome crosstalk as a key homeostatic regulator during nutrient deficiency.
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Rankin, L. C., Kaiser, K. A., de los Santos-Alexis, K., Park, H., Uhlemann, A. C., Gray, D. H. D., & Arpaia, N. (2023). Dietary tryptophan deficiency promotes gut RORγt+ Treg cells at the expense of Gata3+ Treg cells and alters commensal microbiota metabolism. Cell Reports, 42(3). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2023.112135
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