@article{3331, keywords = {bacteria, microbiota}, author = {Jianbo Zhang and Yu-Ja Huang and Martin Trapecar and Charles Wright and Kirsten Schneider and John Kemmitt and Victor Hernandez-Gordillo and Jun Young Yoon and Mathilde Poyet and Eric J. Alm and David T. Breault and David L. Trumper and Linda G. Griffith}, title = {An immune-competent human gut microphysiological system enables inflammation-modulation by Faecalibacterium prausnitzii}, abstract = {Crosstalk of microbes with human gut epithelia and immune cells is crucial for gut health. However, there is no existing system for a long-term co-culture of human innate immune cells with epithelium and oxygen-intolerant commensal microbes, hindering the understanding of microbe-immune interactions in a controlled manner. Here, we established a gut epithelium-microbe-immune (GuMI) microphysiological system to maintain the long-term continuous co-culture of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii/Faecalibacterium duncaniae with colonic epithelium, antigen-presenting cells (APCs, herein dendritic cells and macrophages), and CD4+ naive T cells circulating underneath the colonic epithelium. In GuMI-APC condition, multiplex cytokine assays suggested that APCs contribute to the elevated level of cytokines and chemokines secreted into both apical and basolateral compartments compared to GuMI condition that lacks APC. In GuMI-APC with F. prausnitzii (GuMI-APC-FP), F. prausnitzii increased the transcription of pro-inflammatory genes such as toll-like receptor 1 (TLR1) and interferon alpha 1 (IFNA1) in the colonic epithelium, without a significant effect on cytokine secretion, compared to the GuMI-APC without bacteria (GuMI-APC-NB). In contrast, in the presence of CD4+ naive T cells (GuMI-APCT-FP), TLR1, IFNA1, and IDO1 transcription levels decreased with a simultaneous increase in F. prausnitzii-induced secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines (e.g., IL8) compared to GuMI-APC-FP that lacks T cells. These results highlight the contribution of individual innate immune cells in regulating the immune response triggered by the gut commensal F. prausnitzii. The integration of defined populations of immune cells in the gut microphysiological system demonstrated the usefulness of GuMI physiomimetic platform to study microbe-epithelial-immune interactions in healthy and disease conditions.}, year = {2024}, journal = {npj Biofilms and Microbiomes}, volume = {10}, pages = {1-11}, month = {2024-03-29}, issn = {2055-5008}, url = {https://www.nature.com/articles/s41522-024-00501-z}, doi = {10.1038/s41522-024-00501-z}, language = {en}, }