Myeloperoxidase Gene Deletion Causes Drastic Microbiome Shifts in Mice and Does Not Mitigate Dextran Sodium Sulphate-Induced Colitis

Author:

San Gabriel Patrick T.1ORCID,O’Neil Thomas R.1ORCID,Au Alice1,Tan Jian K.1,Pinget Gabriela V.1,Liu Yuyang1,Fong Genevieve2,Ku Jacqueline3,Glaros Elias3,Macia Laurence1ORCID,Witting Paul K.1ORCID,Thomas Shane R.3,Chami Belal1

Affiliation:

1. Charles Perkins Centre, School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia

2. Rheumatology Department, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Camperdown, NSW 2050, Australia

3. Cardiometabolic Disease Research Group, Department of Pathology, School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia

Abstract

Neutrophil-myeloperoxidase (MPO) is a heme-containing peroxidase which produces excess amounts of hypochlorous acid during inflammation. While pharmacological MPO inhibition mitigates all indices of experimental colitis, no studies have corroborated the role of MPO using knockout (KO) models. Therefore, we investigated MPO deficient mice in a murine model of colitis. Wild type (Wt) and MPO-deficient mice were treated with dextran sodium sulphate (DSS) in a chronic model of experimental colitis with three acute cycles of DSS-induced colitis over 63 days, emulating IBD relapse and remission cycles. Mice were immunologically profiled at the gut muscoa and the faecal microbiome was assessed via 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing. Contrary to previous pharmacological antagonist studies targeting MPO, MPO-deficient mice showed no protection from experimental colitis during cyclical DSS-challenge. We are the first to report drastic faecal microbiota shifts in MPO-deficient mice, showing a significantly different microbiome profile on Day 1 of treatment, with a similar shift and distinction on Day 29 (half-way point), via qualitative and quantitative descriptions of phylogenetic distances. Herein, we provide the first evidence of substantial microbiome shifts in MPO-deficiency, which may influence disease progression. Our findings have significant implications for the utility of MPO-KO mice in investigating disease models.

Funder

Australian NHMRC

Publisher

MDPI AG

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