4.8 Article

Low Dietary Fiber Intake Links Development of Obesity and Lupus Pathogenesis

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.696810

Keywords

autoimmunity; lupus; SLE; diet; fiber; obesity; SCFA

Categories

Funding

  1. B. Braun-Foundation (Germany)
  2. Muller-Fahnenberg-Stiftung (Albert-LudwigUniversity of Freiburg, Germany)
  3. Research Committee (Forschungskommission) of the Medical Faculty of the University of Freiburg
  4. Ministry of Science, Research, and Arts Baden-Wurttemberg (Margarete von Wrangell Programm)
  5. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [TRR 130, 12]
  6. Dr. Heinrich Kircher Foundation (Albert-Ludwigs-University of Freiburg, Germany)

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This study found that low fiber intake exacerbates disease progression in lupus-prone mice, microbiota suppression does not affect disease course as originally assumed, low fiber diet leads to increased white adipose tissue mass, fat inflammation and disrupted intestinal homeostasis, driving systemic low-grade inflammation and autoimmunity. The research highlights the overlooked effects of dietary fiber on energy homeostasis and obesity prevention, showing the complex interplay between inflammatory immune-mediated conditions such as obesity and autoimmunity.
Changed dietary habits in Western countries such as reduced fiber intake represent an important lifestyle factor contributing to the increase in inflammatory immune-mediated diseases. The mode of action of beneficial fiber effects is not fully elucidated, but short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) and gut microbiota have been implicated. The aim of this study was to explore the impact of dietary fiber on lupus pathology and to understand underlying mechanisms. Here, we show that in lupus-prone NZB/WF1 mice low fiber intake deteriorates disease progression reflected in accelerated mortality, autoantibody production and immune dysregulation. In contrast to our original assumption, microbiota suppression by antibiotics or direct SCFA feeding did not influence the course of lupus-like disease. Mechanistically, our data rather indicate that in low fiber-fed mice, an increase in white adipose tissue mass, fat-inflammation and a disrupted intestinal homeostasis go along with systemic, low-grade inflammation driving autoimmunity. The links between obesity, intestinal leakage and low-grade inflammation were confirmed in human samples, while adaptive immune activation predominantly correlated with lupus activity. We further propose that an accelerated gastro-intestinal passage along with energy dilution underlies fiber-mediated weight regulation. Thus, our data highlight the often-overlooked effects of dietary fiber on energy homeostasis and obesity prevention. Further, they provide insight into how intricately the pathologies of inflammatory immune-mediated conditions, such as obesity and autoimmunity, might be interlinked, possibly sharing common pathways.

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