Abstract

Nutrition appears to be an important environmental factor involved in the onset of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) through yet poorly understood biological mechanisms. Most studies focused on fat content in high caloric diets, while refined sugars represent up to 40% of caloric intake within industrialized countries and contribute to the growing epidemics of inflammatory diseases. Herein we aim to better understand the impact of a high-fat-high-sucrose diet on intestinal homeostasis in healthy conditions and the subsequent colitis risk. We investigated the early events and the potential reversibility of high caloric diet-induced damage in mice before experimental colitis. C57BL/6 mice were fed with a high-fat or high-fat high-sucrose or control diet before experimental colitis. In healthy mice, a high-fat high-sucrose diet induces a pre-IBD state characterized by gut microbiota dysbiosis with a total depletion of bacteria belonging to Barnesiella that is associated with subclinical endoscopic lesions. An overall down-regulation of the colonic transcriptome converged with broadly decreased immune cell populations in the mesenteric lymph nodes leading to the inability to respond to tissue injury. Such in-vivo effects on microbiome and transcriptome were partially restored when returning to normal chow. Long-term consumption of diet enriched in sucrose and fat predisposes mice to colitis. This enhanced risk is preceded by gut microbiota dysbiosis and transcriptional reprogramming of colonic genes related to IBD. Importantly, diet-induced transcriptome and microbiome disturbances are partially reversible after switching back to normal chow with persistent sequelae that may contribute to IBD predisposition in the general population.

Highlights

  • Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD) are chronic inflammatory diseases of the gastrointestinal tract with increasing incidence worldwide [1]

  • Mice were fed with a Normal Chow diet (NC), High Fat (HF, 25% fat) or High-Fat High-Sucrose diet (HFHS, 25% fat, 30% sucrose) for 8 weeks (Figure 1A)

  • No differences were observed in food and water consumption, but weight gain were increased in High-fat high-sucrose Diet (HFHS)-fed mice and blood glucose were increased in both HFHS and HF-fed compared to NC-fed mice (Figures 1B–D)

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Summary

Introduction

Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD) are chronic inflammatory diseases of the gastrointestinal tract with increasing incidence worldwide [1]. Recent international recommendations expressed concerns about sugar consumption in Westernized societies as they represent quantities with no precedent during hominin evolution [3, 4]. In both adults and children, the World Health Organization (WHO) strongly recommends reducing the intake of free sugars to less than 10% of total energy intake and suggests a further reduction to below 5% [3,4,5]

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