4.7 Article

Dysbiosis of Gut Microbiota Is Associated With the Progression of Radiation-Induced Intestinal Injury and Is Alleviated by Oral Compound Probiotics in Mouse Model

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.717636

Keywords

ionizing radiation; intestinal injury; dysbiosis; biomarker; probiotics

Funding

  1. Jiangsu Provincial Key Project in Research and Development of Advanced Clinical Technique [BL2018657]
  2. Jiangsu Medical Innovation Team [CXDT-37]
  3. Medicine Outstanding Leader of Suzhou [62]
  4. Pre-research Program of the 2th Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University [SDFEYBS1701]
  5. Scientific Research Program for Young Talents of China National Nuclear Corporation [51003, XKTJ-RC202007]
  6. Military Medical Science and Technology Youth Training Program [17QNP029]

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The study found that dysbiosis of gut microbiota occurs in acute radiation-induced intestinal injury, varying with radiation dose and persisting until the recovery stage. Administration of probiotics can improve survival duration, alleviate intestinal epithelial injury, and partially restore gut microbiota diversity in mice.
The acute radiation-induced intestinal injury (RIII) has raised much concerns and is influenced by non-cytocidal radiation effects including the perturbations in gut microbiota. Although a number of studies have reported alteration in gut microbiota following radiation, little is known about its dynamic variation in the progression of acute RIII. In this study, mouse model were treated with total body irradiation (TBI) of 0, 4, 8 and 12 Gy, and the intestinal tissues and fecal samples were collected at 6 h, 3.5 d and 7 d post radiation. We found that the intestinal injuries were manifested in a radiation dose-dependent manner. Results from 16S rRNA gene sequencing demonstrated that the diversity of gut microbiota was not significantly affected at the prodromal stage of acute RIII, after 6 h of radiation. At the critical stage of acute RIII, after 3.5 d of radiation, the composition of gut microbiota was correlated with the radiation dose. The Pearson's correlation analysis showed that the relative abundances of phylum Proteobacteria, genera Escherichia-Shigella and Eubacterium xylanophilum_group, and species Lactobacillus murinus exhibited linear correlations with radiation dose. At the recovery stage of acute RIII, after 7 d of radiation, the diversity of gut microbiota decreased as a whole, among which the relative abundance of phyla Proteobacteria and Bacteroides increased, while that of phylum Tenericutes and genus Roseburia decreased. The intragastric administration of compound probiotics for 14 days improved the survival duration of mice exposed to 9 Gy TBI, alleviated the intestinal epithelial injury and partially restored the diversity of gut microbiota. Our findings suggest that acute RIII is accompanied by the dysbiosis of gut microbiota, including its decreased diversity, reduced abundance of beneficial bacteria and increased abundance of pathogens. The gut microbiota cannot be used as sensitive biomarkers at the prodromal stage in acute RIII, but are potential biomarkers at the critical stage of acute RIII. The dysbiosis is persistent until the recovery stage of acute RIII, and interventions are needed to restore it. The administration of probiotics is an effective strategy to protect against acute RIII and subsequent dysbiosis.

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