Exclusive enteral nutrition initiates individual protective microbiome changes to induce remission in pediatric Crohn’s disease
- Häcker, Deborah;
- Siebert, Kolja;
- Smith, Byron J;
- Köhler, Nikolai;
- Riva, Alessandra;
- Mahapatra, Aritra;
- Heimes, Helena;
- Nie, Jiatong;
- Metwaly, Amira;
- Hölz, Hannes;
- Manz, Quirin;
- De Zen, Federica;
- Heetmeyer, Jeannine;
- Socas, Katharina;
- Le Thi, Giang;
- Meng, Chen;
- Kleigrewe, Karin;
- Pauling, Josch K;
- Neuhaus, Klaus;
- List, Markus;
- Pollard, Katherine S;
- Schwerd, Tobias;
- Haller, Dirk
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.12.21.23300351v1Abstract
Exclusive enteral nutrition (EEN) is a first-line therapy for pediatric Crohn's disease (CD), but protective mechanisms remain unknown. We established a prospective pediatric cohort to characterize the function of fecal microbiota and metabolite changes of treatment-naive CD patients in response to EEN (German Clinical Trials DRKS00013306). Integrated multi-omics analysis identified network clusters from individually variable microbiome profiles, with Lachnospiraceae and medium-chain fatty acids as protective features. Bioorthogonal non-canonical amino acid tagging selectively identified bacterial species in response to medium-chain fatty acids. Metagenomic analysis identified high strain-level dynamics in response to EEN. Functional changes in diet-exposed fecal microbiota were further validated using gut chemostat cultures and microbiota transfer into germ-free Il10-deficient mice. Dietary model conditions induced individual patient-specific strain signatures to prevent or cause inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)-like inflammation in gnotobiotic mice. Hence, we provide evidence that EEN therapy operates through explicit functional changes of temporally and individually variable microbiome profiles.
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