TY - JOUR
T1 - Antibiotics Drive Microbial Imbalance and Vitiligo Development in Mice
AU - Dellacecca, Emilia R.
AU - Cosgrove, Cormac
AU - Mukhatayev, Zhussipbek
AU - Akhtar, Suhail
AU - Engelhard, Victor H.
AU - Rademaker, Alfred W.
AU - Knight, Katherine L.
AU - Le Poole, I. Caroline
N1 - Funding Information:
Research was supported in part by National Institutes of Health, USA (NIH RO1 AR057643 to CLP) and by a Cancer Center Support Grant from the National Cancer Institute, USA (NCI CA060553) to Northwestern's Flow Cytometry and Imaging Cores. Conceptualization, ICLP and KLK; Methodology, ICLP and KLK; Formal Analysis, AWR; Investigation, ERD, CC, ZM, and SA; Project Administration, ICLP; Resources, VHE; Supervision, ICLP; Writing – Original Draft, ICLP Writing – Review & Editing, ICLP, VHE, ERD, and CC; Visualization, ERD and CC
Funding Information:
Research was supported in part by National Institutes of Health, USA ( NIH RO1 AR057643 to CLP) and by a Cancer Center Support Grant from the National Cancer Institute, USA (NCI CA060553) to Northwestern’s Flow Cytometry and Imaging Cores.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 The Authors
PY - 2020/3
Y1 - 2020/3
N2 - Vitiligo is impacted by environmental triggers. We studied the contribution of the microbiome in FH mice, in which depigmentation is mediated by tyrosinase-reactive T cells. The mice received oral antibiotics and were monitored for depigmentation. The microbiome was studied in fecal and skin samples using 16S rRNA analysis. The resulting T-cell distributions were evaluated. In untreated mice, pigment loss did not expand to the pelage, whereas mice in the ampicillin group were approximately 1/3 depigmented at 30 weeks. In contrast to models of autoimmunity that are less dependent on IFN-γ, ampicillin but not neomycin treatment correlated with accelerated disease and reduced bacteria in the fecal pellets. Modified cytokine patterns in the tissue and serum suggest a response that transcends the gut. Ampicillin-induced depigmentation was accompanied by gut but not skin dysbiosis, and reduced T cell numbers in both sites. Neomycin induced a redistribution of gut T cells and an accumulation of skin regulatory T cells. This treatment spurred a Bacteroides-dominated population of fecal bacteria. Reduced diversity is prominent particularly after ampicillin treatment, when the gut is dominated by Pseudomonas species. In line with current concepts relating the microbiome and the immune system, we predict that dietary measures might promote skin health and delay vitiligo onset.
AB - Vitiligo is impacted by environmental triggers. We studied the contribution of the microbiome in FH mice, in which depigmentation is mediated by tyrosinase-reactive T cells. The mice received oral antibiotics and were monitored for depigmentation. The microbiome was studied in fecal and skin samples using 16S rRNA analysis. The resulting T-cell distributions were evaluated. In untreated mice, pigment loss did not expand to the pelage, whereas mice in the ampicillin group were approximately 1/3 depigmented at 30 weeks. In contrast to models of autoimmunity that are less dependent on IFN-γ, ampicillin but not neomycin treatment correlated with accelerated disease and reduced bacteria in the fecal pellets. Modified cytokine patterns in the tissue and serum suggest a response that transcends the gut. Ampicillin-induced depigmentation was accompanied by gut but not skin dysbiosis, and reduced T cell numbers in both sites. Neomycin induced a redistribution of gut T cells and an accumulation of skin regulatory T cells. This treatment spurred a Bacteroides-dominated population of fecal bacteria. Reduced diversity is prominent particularly after ampicillin treatment, when the gut is dominated by Pseudomonas species. In line with current concepts relating the microbiome and the immune system, we predict that dietary measures might promote skin health and delay vitiligo onset.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jid.2019.08.435
DO - 10.1016/j.jid.2019.08.435
M3 - Article
C2 - 31472106
AN - SCOPUS:85076234983
VL - 140
SP - 676-687.e6
JO - Journal of Investigative Dermatology
JF - Journal of Investigative Dermatology
SN - 0022-202X
IS - 3
ER -