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Publié dans: iScience 2023 Jun; 26(6): 106910

Auteurs: Hidalgo-Villeda F, Million M, Defoort C, Vannier T, Svilar L, Lagier M, Wagner C, Arroyo-Portilla C, Chasson L, Luciani C, Bossi V, Gorvel JP, Lelouard H, Tomas J

Résumé

Severe acute malnutrition (SAM) is a multifactorial disease affecting millions of children worldwide. It is associated with changes in intestinal physiology, microbiota, and mucosal immunity, emphasizing the need for multidisciplinary studies to unravel its full pathogenesis. We established an experimental model in which weanling mice fed a high-deficiency diet mimic key anthropometric and physiological features of SAM in children. This diet alters the intestinal microbiota (less segmented filamentous bacteria, spatial proximity to epithelium), metabolism (decreased butyrate), and immune cell populations (depletion of LysoDC in Peyer’s patches and intestinal Th17 cells). A nutritional intervention leads to a fast zoometric and intestinal physiology recovery but to an incomplete restoration of the intestinal microbiota, metabolism, and immune system. Altogether, we provide a preclinical model of SAM and have identified key markers to target with future interventions during the education of the immune system to improve SAM whole defects.

Lien vers Pubmed [PMID] – 37378323

Lien vers HAL – hal-04283997

Lien vers le DOI – 10.1016/j.isci.2023.106910