Dietary therapy of murine primary biliary cholangitis induces hepatocellular steatosis: A cautionary tale

Author:

Zhang Weici1ORCID,Al Tekreeti Taha1,Leung Patrick S. C.1,Tsuneyama Koichi2,Dhillon Harleen1,Rojas Manuel13,Heuer Luke S.1,Ridgway William M.1,Ansari Aftab A.1,Young Howard A.4,Mackay Charles R.5,Gershwin M. Eric1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Rheumatology, Allergy, and Clinical Immunology, School of Medicine University of California Davis California USA

2. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Institute of Biomedical Sciences Tokushima University Graduate School Tokushima Japan

3. Center for Autoimmune Diseases Research (CREA), School of Medicine and Health Sciences Universidad del Rosario Bogota Colombia

4. Cancer Innovation Laboratory, Center for Cancer Research NCI at Frederick Frederick Maryland USA

5. Department of Microbiology, Infection and Immunity Program, Biomedicine Discovery Institute Monash University Clayton Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackground and AimsThere is increased interest in utilizing dietary interventions to alter the progression of autoimmune diseases. These efforts are driven by associations of gut microbiota/metabolites with levels of short‐chain fatty acids (SCFAs). Propionate is a key SCFA that is commonly used as a food preservative and is endogenously generated by bacterial fermentation of non‐digestible carbohydrates in the gut. A thesis has suggested that a diet rich in propionate and other SCFAs can successfully modulate autoimmunity. Herein, we investigated the effect of long‐term administration of propionylated high‐amylose resistant starches (HAMSP) on the course of murine primary biliary cholangitis.Materials and MethodsGroups of female ARE‐Del mice were fed an HAMSP diet either before or after disease onset. A detailed immunobiological analysis was performed involving autoantibodies and rigorous T‐cell phenotyping, including enumeration of T‐cell subsets in the spleen, liver, intestinal intraepithelial lymphocytes and lamina propria by flow cytometry. Histopathological scores were used to assess the frequency and severity of liver inflammation and damage to hepatocytes and bile ducts.ResultsOur results demonstrate that a long‐term propionate‐yielding diet re‐populated the T‐cell pool with decreased naïve and central memory T‐cell subsets and an increase in the effector memory T cells in mice. Similarly, long‐term HAMSP intake reduced CD4+CD8+ double‐positive T cells in intraepithelial lymphocytes and the intestinal lamina propria. Critically, HAMSP consumption led to moderate‐to‐severe hepatocellular steatosis in ARE‐Del mice, independent of the stage of autoimmune cholangitis.ConclusionsOur data suggest that administration of HAMSP induces both regulatory and effector T cells. Furthermore, HAMSP administration resulted in hepatocellular steatosis. Given the interest in dietary modulation of autoimmunity and because propionate is widely used as a food preservative, these data have significant implications. This study also provides new insights into the immunological and pathological effects of chronic propionate exposure.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

Wiley

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