Abstract

The impact of commensal bacteria in eukaryotic transcriptional regulation has increasingly been demonstrated over the last decades. A multitude of studies have shown direct effects of commensal bacteria from local transcriptional activity to systemic impact. The commensal bacterium Streptococcus salivarius is one of the early bacteria colonizing the oral and gut mucosal surfaces. It has been shown to down-regulate nuclear transcription factor (NF-кB) in human intestinal cells, a central regulator of the host mucosal immune system response to the microbiota. In order to evaluate its impact on a further important transcription factor shown to link metabolism and inflammation in the intestine, namely PPARγ (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor), we used human intestinal epithelial cell-lines engineered to monitor PPARγ transcriptional activity in response to a wide range of S. salivarius strains. We demonstrated that different strains from this bacterial group share the property to inhibit PPARγ activation independently of the ligand used. First attempts to identify the nature of the active compounds showed that it is a low-molecular-weight, DNase-, proteases- and heat-resistant metabolite secreted by S. salivarius strains. Among PPARγ-targeted metabolic genes, I-FABP and Angptl4 expression levels were dramatically reduced in intestinal epithelial cells exposed to S. salivarius supernatant. Both gene products modulate lipid accumulation in cells and down-regulating their expression might consequently affect host health. Our study shows that species belonging to the salivarius group of streptococci impact both host inflammatory and metabolic regulation suggesting a possible role in the host homeostasis and health.

Highlights

  • The Human gastrointestinal tract (GIT) harbors a highly diverse and dense population of commensal microorganisms, commonly named microbiota

  • We previously demonstrated that S. salivarius strains inhibit NF-κB activation in intestinal epithelial cells (IEC) through an unknown mechanism [34]

  • As NF-κB and Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor-γ (PPARγ) are transcription factors targeted by bacteria including commensals [20, 34], we aimed to understand if S. salivarius-dependent down-modulation of NF-κB was linked to the induction of PPARγ transcriptional activity

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Summary

Objectives

As NF-κB and PPARγ are transcription factors targeted by bacteria including commensals [20, 34], we aimed to understand if S. salivarius-dependent down-modulation of NF-κB was linked to the induction of PPARγ transcriptional activity

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