Abstract:
The gut is considered to be the biggest immunological organ in mammals and the composition of the
intestinal microbiota is therefore assumed to have widespread effects on the immune system of its
host. During past years, more and more insights were gained concerning the correlation of intestinal
microbiota composition and onset and progress of various autoimmune diseases, i.e. Inflammatory
Bowel Diseases (IBD). Nevertheless, insights in defined molecular mechanisms underlying these
observations are rare. However, a deeper knowledge of these mechanisms is necessary for proper
drug development for gut-associated and immune system-related pathologies. With this work,
knowledge gaps concerning molecular events of the interplay between commensal gut bacteria and
the host immune system shall be closed. In this context, we focused on how different intestinal
commensals, symbionts and pathobionts, differentially influence the host immune system.
Briefly summarized, B. vulgatus mpk, a Gram negative model symbiont of the intestinal microbiota,
was able to prevent from induction of intestinal inflammation in a mouse model for experimental
colitis. This effect was not restricted to prevention, as even already established colonic inflammation
was reduced by oral administration of this bacterium, resulting in complete healing of damaged
colonic tissue. Furthermore, isolated lipopolysaccharide from B. vulgatus mpk, providing a unique
core oligosaccharide structure, was able to mimic both observed bacteria-mediated therapeutic
effects. Additionally and for the first time, a symbiotic commensal such as B. vulgatus mpk was
demonstrated to prevent from cathepsin S activity upregulation in host dendritic cells by a regulation
mechanism involving the endogenous protein cystatin C. Cathepsin S activity regulation is a decisive
criterion for the prevention of pathological CD4+ T cell mediated immune responses. Since many
autoimmune diseases were already demonstrated to be associated with cathepsin S activity
dysregulation, our observation might explain why and how the microbiota composition influences
the progress of autoimmune diseases in various mouse models. We furthermore showed that
cathepsin S activity regulation in dendritic cells is part of DC semi-maturation. Semi-mature DCs
provide a a tolerant and tolerogenic phenotype contributing to (re-)establishment of intestinal
homeostasis and prevention of pathological inflammation.
Taken together, we hereby offer novel therapeutic approaches for the treatment of inflammatory
bowel disease in specific and autoimmune diseases in general. First, lipopolysaccharides of symbiotic
commensals might act as therapeutic agents and insights gained from the structural analysis of
B. vulgatus mpk LPS might help to chemically design novel inflammation-silencing drugs. Second,
B. vulgatus mpk was shown to prevent from pathological cathepsin S activitiy increase, making this
bacterium an attractive alternative to chemical cathepsin S inhibitors which are widely considered to
be promising drugs for the treatment of autoimmune diseases.