Differential Modulation of Mouse Intestinal Organoids with Fecal Luminal Factors from Obese, Allergic, Asthmatic Children
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Córdova, Samir; Tena Garitaonaindia, Mireia; Álvarez Mercado, Ana Isabel; Gámez Belmonte, María de los Reyes; Gómez Llorente, Mª Amelia; Sánchez De Medina López-Huertas, Fermín; Martínez Cañavate, Ana; Martínez Augustín, María Olga; Gómez Llorente, CarolinaEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Organoids Fecal content Gastrointestinal microbiome
Fecha
2024-01-10Referencia bibliográfica
Córdova, S.; Tena-Garitaonaindia, M.; Álvarez-Mercado, A.I.; Gámez-Belmonte, R.; Gómez-Llorente, M.A.; Sánchez de Medina, F.; Martínez-Cañavate, A.; Martínez-Augustin, O.; Gómez-Llorente, C. Differential Modulation of Mouse Intestinal Organoids with Fecal Luminal Factors from Obese, Allergic, Asthmatic Children. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2024, 25, 866. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25020866
Patrocinador
Fundacion Progreso y Salud Project number PI-0373-2014; Agencia Andaluza del Conocimiento, Regional Government of Andalucía and European Regional Development Fund through project A-CTS-263-UGR18; Grant PID2020-112768RB-I00 funded by MICINN; Grant from Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Spain (PI21/00952); Grants A-AGR-468- UGR20 and P20-00695 funded by Junta de Andalucía and FEDER; The Spanish Government through an FPU grant; Instituto de Salud Carlos III, SpainResumen
Asthma is a multifactorial condition that can be associated with obesity. The phenotypes of asthma in lean and obese patients are different, with proinflammatory signatures being further elevated in the latter. Both obesity and asthma are associated with alterations in intestinal barrier function and immunity, and with the composition of the intestinal microbiota and food consumption. In this study, we aimed to establish an organoid model to test the hypothesis that the intestinal content of lean and obese, allergic, asthmatic children differentially regulates epithelial intestinal gene expression. A model of mouse jejunum intestinal organoids was used. A group of healthy, normal-weight children was used as a control. The intestinal content of asthmatic obese children differentially induced the expression of inflammatory and mitochondrial response genes (Tnf-tumor necrosis factor, Cd14, Muc13-mucin 13, Tff2-Trefoil factor 2 and Tff3, Cldn1-claudin 1 and 5, Reg3g-regenerating family member 3 gamma, mt-Nd1-NADH dehydrogenase 1 and 6, and mt-Cyb-mitochondrial cytochrome b) via the RAGE-advanced glycosylation end product-specific receptor, NF-κB-nuclear factor kappa b and AKT kinase signal transduction pathways. Fecal homogenates from asthmatic normal-weight and obese children induce a differential phenotype in intestinal organoids, in which the presence of obesity plays a major role.