4.6 Review

Systems Biology and Bile Acid Signalling in Microbiome-Host Interactions in the Cystic Fibrosis Lung

期刊

ANTIBIOTICS-BASEL
卷 10, 期 7, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antibiotics10070766

关键词

cystic fibrosis; lung; microbiota; gastro-oesophageal reflux; chronic infection; pathogen; inflammation; bile acids; Pseudomonas aeruginosa; aspiration

资金

  1. European Commission [EU-634486]
  2. Science Foundation Ireland [SSPC-2/PharM5, 13/TIDA/B2625, 14/TIDA/2438, 15/TIDA/2977]
  3. Health Research Board (HRB)/Irish Thoracic Society [MRCG-2014-6, MRCG-2018-16, HRB-ILP-POR-2019-004]
  4. Enterprise Ireland Commercialisation Fund [CF-2017-0757-P]
  5. Glenn Brown Memorial Grant 2017 (The Institute for Respiratory Health, Perth, Australia)
  6. US CF Foundation [CFF 1710]
  7. Australian NHMRC 2020-(Synergy) [APP1183640]
  8. Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) [14/TIDA/2438, 13/TIDA/B2625, 15/TIDA/2977] Funding Source: Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The imbalance in respiratory microbiota can lead to lung disease pathogenesis, with bile acids playing a key role in CF cases, associated with inflammation and restructuring of lung microbiota towards a pathogen-dominated state.
The study of the respiratory microbiota has revealed that the lungs of healthy and diseased individuals harbour distinct microbial communities. Imbalances in these communities can contribute to the pathogenesis of lung disease. How these imbalances occur and establish is largely unknown. This review is focused on the genetically inherited condition of Cystic Fibrosis (CF). Understanding the microbial and host-related factors that govern the establishment of chronic CF lung inflammation and pathogen colonisation is essential. Specifically, dissecting the interplay in the inflammation-pathogen-host axis. Bile acids are important host derived and microbially modified signal molecules that have been detected in CF lungs. These bile acids are associated with inflammation and restructuring of the lung microbiota linked to chronicity. This community remodelling involves a switch in the lung microbiota from a high biodiversity/low pathogen state to a low biodiversity/pathogen-dominated state. Bile acids are particularly associated with the dominance of Proteobacterial pathogens. The ability of bile acids to impact directly on both the lung microbiota and the host response offers a unifying principle underpinning the pathogenesis of CF. The modulating role of bile acids in lung microbiota dysbiosis and inflammation could offer new potential targets for designing innovative therapeutic approaches for respiratory disease.

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