Certain saturated fats that are common in the modern Western
diet can initiate a chain of events leading to complex immune disorders such as
inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) in people with a genetic predisposition,
according to a study to be published early online in the journal Nature.
The finding helps explain why once-rare immune-mediated diseases
have become more common in westernized societies in the last half century. It
also provides insights into why many individuals who are genetically prone to
these diseases are never affected and how certain environmental factors can produce
inflammation in individuals already at risk.
Researchers at the University
of Chicago found that
concentrated milk fat alter the composition of bacteria in the intestines. The
changes can disrupt the delicate truce between the immune system and the complex
but largely beneficial mix of bacteria in the intestines. The emergence of
harmful bacterial strains in this setting can unleash an unregulated
tissue-damaging immune response that can be difficult to switch off.
“This is the first plausible mechanism showing step-by-step how
Western-style diets contribute to the rapid and ongoing increase in the
incidence of inflammatory bowel disease," said study author Eugene B.
Chang, MD, PhD, the Martin Boyer Professor of Medicine at the University of Chicago .
“We know how certain genetic differences can increase the risk for these
diseases, but moving from elevated risk to the development of disease seems to
require a second event which may be encountered because of our changing
lifestyle."
The researchers worked with a mouse model that has many of the
characteristics of human IBD. Genetically deleting a molecule, interleukin 10,
which acts as a brake on the immune system’s response to intestinal bacteria,
caused about 20% of mice to develop colitis when fed a low-fat diet or a diet
high in polyunsaturated fats. When exposed to a diet high in saturated milk
fats, the rate of disease development within six months tripled, increasing to
more than 60%. In addition, the onset, severity and extent of colitis were much
greater than that observed in mice fed low-fat diets.
In investigating why milk fat triggered inflammation when
polyunsaturated fat did not, the researchers traced the answer to the gut
microbiome, the complex mix of hundreds of bacterial strains that reside in the
bowels. They found an uncommon microbe called Bilophila wadsworthia was preferentially selected in the
presence of milk fat. Previous studies had found high levels of B. wadsworthia in patients with
appendicitis and other intestinal inflammatory disorders, including
inflammatory bowel disease.
While Bilophila wadsworthia
levels were almost undetectable in mice on a low-fat or unsaturated-fat diet,
the bacteria made up about 6% of all gut bacteria in mice fed a high milk-fat
diet. “Here we show how the trend in consumption of Western-type diets by many
societies can potentially tip the mutualistic balance between host and microbe
to a state that favors the onset of disease," Chang said.
As its name implies, Bilophila
wadsworthia has an affinity for bile, a substance produced by the
liver and released into the intestines to help break down ingested fats. Milk
fats are particularly difficult to digest and require the liver to secrete a
form of bile that is rich in sulfur. B.
wadsworthia thrives in the presence of sulfur. So when the bile
created to dissolve milk fats reaches the colon, it enables B. wadsworthia to blossom and activate
the immune system of genetically prone individuals.
The byproducts of B.
wadsworthia’s interaction with bile also can amplify the effect.
They serve as “gut mucosal barrier breakers," said Suzanne Devkota, PhD, a
member of Chang’s laboratory and first author of the study. “By increasing the
permeability of the bowel, they enhance immune-cell infiltration, and that can
induce tissue damage."
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