Mouse study reveals how gut microbes fight influenza
By Jim Dryden
Microbes that live in the gut don’t
just digest food. They also have far-reaching effects on the immune system.
Now, a new study shows that a particular gut microbe can prevent severe flu
infections in mice, likely by breaking down naturally occurring compounds —
called flavonoids — commonly found in foods such as black tea, red wine and
blueberries.
The research, conducted in mice by
scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, also
indicates that this strategy is effective in staving off severe damage from flu
when the interaction occurs prior to infection with the influenza virus. This
work also could help explain the wide variation in human responses to influenza
infection.
“For years, flavonoids have been
thought to have protective properties that help regulate the immune system to
fight infections,” said first author Ashley L.
Steed, MD, PhD, an instructor in pediatrics who treats intensive
care patients at St. Louis
Children’s Hospital.
“Flavonoids are common in our diets,
so an important implication of our study is that it’s possible flavonoids work
with gut microbes to protect us from flu and other viral infections. Obviously,
we need to learn more, but our results are intriguing.”
Influenza — characterized by fever,
cough and body aches — is a common and sometimes deadly viral infection of the
upper respiratory tract. Older adults, pregnant women, young children and
people with chronic health problems such as asthma and heart disease are most
prone to serious flu complications.
Since 2004, an average of 113
children have died from influenza in the U.S. each year, according to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Around the world, the World Health
Organization estimates there are 250,000 to 500,000 flu-related deaths
annually.
Previous evidence suggests that the
gut microbiome may be important in protecting against severe influenza
infections, so in this study, the researchers aimed to identify just what gut
microbes might provide that protection. In addition, for years, nutritionists
have explored potential health benefits linked to foods loaded with flavonoids.
“It’s not only having a diet rich in
flavonoids, our results show you also need the right microbes in the intestine
to use those flavonoids to control the immune response,” said the study’s
senior author, Thaddeus S.
Stappenbeck, MD, PhD, the Conan Professor of Pathology &
Immunology.
“We were able to identify at least
one type of bacteria that uses these dietary compounds to boost interferon, a
signaling molecule that aids the immune response. This prevented
influenza-related lung damage in the mice. It is this kind of damage that often
causes significant complications such as pneumonia in people.”
As part of the study, the
researchers screened human gut microbes looking for one that metabolized
flavonoids. Stappenbeck and Steed identified one such microbe that they
suspected might protect against flu damage. The microbe, called Clostridium orbiscindens, degrades flavonoids to
produce a metabolite that enhances interferon signaling.
“The metabolite is called
desaminotyrosine, otherwise known as DAT,” Steed said. “When we gave DAT to
mice and then infected them with influenza, the mice experienced far less lung
damage than mice not treated with DAT.”
Interestingly, although the lungs of
DAT-treated mice didn’t have as much flu damage, their levels of viral
infection were identical to those in mice that didn’t get the treatment.
“The infections were basically the
same,” Stappenbeck said. “The microbes and DAT didn’t prevent the flu infection
itself; the mice still had the virus. But the DAT kept the immune system from
harming the lung tissue.”
That’s important because annual flu
vaccines aren’t always effective at preventing infections.
“But with DAT, it may be possible to
keep people from getting quite as sick if they do become infected,” Steed said.
“This strategy doesn’t target the virus. Instead, it targets the immune
response to the virus. That could be valuable because there are challenges with
therapies and vaccines that target the virus due to changes in the influenza
virus that occur over time.”
Next steps include identifying other
gut microbes that also may use flavonoids to influence the immune system, as
well as exploring ways to boost the levels of those bacteria in people whose
intestines aren’t adequately colonized with those microbes.
As those future
studies are planned, the researchers said it might not be a bad idea to drink
black tea and eat foods rich in flavonoids before the next flu season begins.