4.7 Article

Dietary restriction increases protective gut bacteria to rescue lethal methotrexate-induced intestinal toxicity

Journal

GUT MICROBES
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/19490976.2020.1714401

Keywords

Dietary restriction; methotrexate; gut microbiota; intestinal stem cells; intestinal toxicity

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Fund of China [NSFC-81660520, NSFC-81660244, NSFC-81860027, NSFC-81960267, NSFC-81460030, NSFC-81770221]
  2. Jiangxi Provincial Nature Science Foundation [20171ACB21060, 20181BAB205060, 2018ACB21034]

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Methotrexate (MTX) is a typical chemotherapeutic drug that is widely used in the treatment of various malignant diseases as well as autoimmune diseases, with gastrointestinal toxicity being its most prominent complication which could have a significant effect on the prognosis of patients. Yet effective ways to alleviate such complications remains to be explored. Here we show that 30% dietary restriction (DR) for 2 weeks dramatically increased the survival rate of 2-month-old female mice after lethal-dose MTX exposure. DR significantly reduced intestinal inflammation, preserved the number of basal crypt PCNA-positive cells, and protected the function of intestinal stem cells (ISCs) after MTX treatment. Furthermore, ablating intestinal microbiota by broad-spectrum antibiotics completely eliminated the protective effect achieved by DR. 16S rRNA gene deep-sequencing analysis revealed that short-term DR significantly increased the Lactobacillus genus, with Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG gavage partially mimicking the rescue effect of DR on the intestines of ad libitum fed mice exposed to lethal-dose MTX. Together, the current study reveals that DR could be a highly effective way to alleviate the lethal injury in the intestine after high-dose MTX treatment, which is functionally mediated by increasing the protective intestinal microbiota taxa in mice. Keywords: Dietary restriction, Methotrexate, Gut microbiota, Intestinal stem cells, intestinal toxicity

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