Persons with cystic fibrosis, starting in early life, have intestinal microbiome dysbiosis characterized in part by a decreased relative abundance of the genus Bacteroides. Bacteroides is a major producer of the intestinal short chain fatty acid (SCFA) propionate. We demonstrate here that CFTR-/- Caco-2 intestinal epithelial cells are responsive to the anti-inflammatory effects of propionate. Furthermore, Bacteroides isolates inhibit the IL-1β-induced inflammatory response of CFTR-/- Caco-2 intestinal epithelial cells and do so in a propionate-dependent manner. Bacteroides isolates also produce low levels of butyrate; this SCFA is positively correlated with inhibition of the inflammatory response. Finally, the introduction of Bacteroides-supplemented stool from infants with CF into the gut of CftrF508del mice results in an increase in propionate in the stool as well as the reduction in several systemic pro-inflammatory cytokines. Bacteroides supplementation also reduced the fecal relative abundance of E. coli, indicating a potential interaction between these two microbes, consistent with previous clinical studies. Together, our data indicate the important role of Bacteroides and Bacteroides-derived propionate in the context of the developing microbiome in infants and children with CF, which could help explain the observed gut-lung axis in CF.
Pseudomonas stutzeri CM14, Pseudomonas fluorescens BL, and Pantoea agglomerans BL3 were isolated from Humulus lupulus cones. Here, we present the draft genome sequences of three bacteria that have been associated with hop plants.
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