Systems Immunology of Human Diseases


Exacerbation of Chikungunya Virus Rheumatic Immunopathology by a High Fiber Diet and Butyrate.

Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is a mosquito transmitted alphavirus associated with a robust systemic infection and an acute inflammatory rheumatic disease. A high fiber diet has been widely promoted for its ability to ameliorate inflammatory diseases. Fiber is fermented in the gut into short chain fatty acids such as acetate, propionate, and butyrate, which enter the circulation providing systemic anti-inflammatory activities. Herein we show that mice fed a high fiber diet show a clear exacerbation of CHIKV arthropathy, with increased edema and neutrophil infiltrates. RNA-Seq analyses illustrated that a high fiber diet, in this setting, promoted a range of pro-neutrophil responses including Th17/IL-17. Gene Set Enrichment Analyses demonstrated significant similarities with mouse models of inflammatory psoriasis and significant depression of macrophage resolution phase signatures in the CHIKV arthritic lesions from mice fed a high fiber diet. Supplementation of the drinking water with butyrate also increased edema after CHIKV infection. However, the mechanisms involved were different, with modulation of AP-1 and NF-κB responses identified, potentially implicating deoptimization of endothelial barrier repair. Thus, neither fiber nor short chain fatty acids provided benefits in this acute infectious disease setting, which is characterized by widespread viral cytopathic effects and a need for tissue repair.

Authors

Natalie A Prow; Thiago D C Hirata; Bing Tang; Thibaut Larcher; Pamela Mukhopadhyay; Tiago Lubiana Alves; Thuy T Le; Joy Gardner; Yee Suan Poo; Eri Nakayama; Viviana P Lutzky; Helder I Nakaya; Andreas Suhrbier

External link

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31849947

Publication Year

2019

Publication Journal

Frontiers in immunology

Associeted Project

Systems Immunology of Human Diseases

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