Research Highlights
Dr Haoyu Liu with her team published noteworthy findings in Microbiome



Dr Haoyu Liu from the Laboratory of Animal Physiology and Molecular Nutrition, College of Animal Science and Technology at Yangzhou University, as the first author with her team at Uppsala University, published their fingdings in the October online edition of Microbiome. Intestinal Peyer’s patches (PPs) form unique niches for bacteria-immune cell interactions that direct host immunity and shape the microbiome.They investigate how peroral administration of probiotic bacterium Limosilactobacillus reuteri R2LC affects B lymphocytes and IgA induction in the PPs, as well as the downstream consequences on intestinal microbiota and susceptibility to inflammation.


The B cells of PPs were separated by size to circumvent activation-dependent cell identification biases due to dynamic expression of markers, which resulted in two phenotypically, transcriptionally, and spatially distinct subsets: small IgD+/GL7−/S1PR1+/Bcl6, CCR6-expressing pre-germinal center (GC)-like B cells with innate-like functions located subepithelially, and large GL7+/S1PR1−/Ki67+/Bcl6, CD69-expressing B cells with strong metabolic activity found in the GC. Peroral L. reuteri administration expanded both B cell subsets and enhanced the innate-like properties of pre-GC-like B cells while retaining them in the sub-epithelial compartment by increased sphingosine-1-phosphate/S1PR1 signaling. Furthermore, L. reuteri promoted GC-like B cell differentiation, which involved expansion of the GC area and autocrine TGFβ-1 activation. Consequently, PD-1-T follicular helper cell-dependent IgA induction and production was increased by L. reuteri, which shifted the intestinal microbiome and protected against dextran-sulfate-sodium induced colitis and dysbiosis.

They reach the conclusions that the Peyer’s patches sense, enhance and transmit probiotic signals by increasing the numbers and effector functions of distinct B cell subsets, resulting in increased IgA production, altered intestinal microbiota, and protection against inflammation.


DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-021-01128-4


Academics
Humanities & Social Sciences
Natural Sciences
Engineering
Agriculture
Medicine
Graduate School
Continuing Education
Academic Calendar
ABOUT
Overview
History
University Leadership
Virtual Tour
Maps & Directions
Alumni
Faculty Recruitment
Research
Centers & Institutes
International Collaborative Lab
Key Disciplines
Academicians
Journals
Research Achievements
Research Highlights
Global Research Partnerships
Global
120th Anniversary Congratulations
Global Cooperation
JMPUN
Sino-foreign Joint Programs
Canal-city University Cooperation Mechanism,CUCM
Jiangsu-UK World-Class University Consortium
China-Latin America Agricultural Education and Research Innovation Alliance,CLAERIA
On Campus
Campus Life
Museum
Library

Tel: 86-514-87971858 Fax: 86-514-87311374 Add: 88 South Daxue Road, Yangzhou, Jiangsu Province
Copyright © 2019 Yangzhou University All Rights Reserved. 苏公网安备 32100302010246号

×