4.7 Article

Casein hydrolysate diet controls intestinal T cell activation, free radical production and microbial colonisation in NOD mice

Journal

DIABETOLOGIA
Volume 56, Issue 8, Pages 1781-1791

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00125-013-2941-x

Keywords

Casein hydrolysate; Dietary intervention; Guanine and cytosine profiling; Gut immune system; In vivo imaging system; Laser capture microscopy; Microbiota analysis; Nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse; Reactive oxygen and nitrogen species; Type 1 diabetes

Funding

  1. Paivikki and Sakari Sohlberg Foundation
  2. Turku University Foundation
  3. Finnish Diabetes Research Foundation
  4. Academy of Finland
  5. Sigrid Juselius Foundation
  6. Turku Doctoral Programme for Biomedical Sciences

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Dietary and microbial factors and the gut immune system are important in autoimmune diabetes. We evaluated inflammatory activity in the whole gut in prediabetic NOD mice using ex vivo imaging of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS), and correlated this with the above-mentioned factors. NOD mice were fed a normal diet or an anti-diabetogenic casein hydrolysate (CH) diet. RONS activity was detected by chemiluminescence imaging of the whole gut. Proinflammatory and T cell cytokines were studied in the gut and islets, and dietary effects on gut microbiota and short-chain fatty acids were determined. Prediabetic NOD mice displayed high RONS activity in the epithelial cells of the distal small intestine, in conjunction with a proinflammatory cytokine profile. RONS production was effectively reduced by the CH diet, which also controlled (1) the expression of proinflammatory cytokines and colonisation-dependent RegIII gamma (also known as Reg3g) in ileum; (2) intestinal T cell activation; and (3) islet cytokines. The CH diet diminished microbial colonisation, increased the Bacteroidetes:Firmicutes ratio, and reduced lactic acid and butyric acid production in the gut. Epithelial RONS production and proinflammatory T cell activation appears in the ileum of NOD mice after weaning to normal laboratory chow, but not after weaning to an anti-diabetogenic CH diet. Our data suggest a link between dietary factors, microbial colonisation and mucosal immune activation in NOD mice.

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