Lymphotoxin regulates commensal responses to enable diet-induced obesity

V Upadhyay, V Poroyko, T Kim, S Devkota, S Fu… - Nature …, 2012 - nature.com
V Upadhyay, V Poroyko, T Kim, S Devkota, S Fu, D Liu, AV Tumanov, EP Koroleva, L Deng
Nature immunology, 2012nature.com
Microbiota are essential for weight gain in mouse models of diet-induced obesity (DIO), but
the pathways that cause the microbiota to induce weight gain are unknown. We report that
mice deficient in lymphotoxin, a key molecule in gut immunity, were resistant to DIO. Ltbr−/−
mice had different microbial community composition compared to their heterozygous
littermates, including an overgrowth of segmented filamentous bacteria (SFB). Furthermore,
cecal transplantation conferred leanness to germ-free recipients. Housing Ltbr−/− mice with …
Abstract
Microbiota are essential for weight gain in mouse models of diet-induced obesity (DIO), but the pathways that cause the microbiota to induce weight gain are unknown. We report that mice deficient in lymphotoxin, a key molecule in gut immunity, were resistant to DIO. Ltbr−/− mice had different microbial community composition compared to their heterozygous littermates, including an overgrowth of segmented filamentous bacteria (SFB). Furthermore, cecal transplantation conferred leanness to germ-free recipients. Housing Ltbr−/− mice with their obese siblings rescued weight gain in Ltbr−/− mice, demonstrating the communicability of the obese phenotype. Ltbr−/− mice lacked interleukin 23 (IL-23) and IL-22, which can regulate SFB. Mice deficient in these pathways also resisted DIO, demonstrating that intact mucosal immunity guides diet-induced changes to the microbiota to enable obesity.
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