Chronic binge drinking-induced susceptibility to colonic inflammation is microbiome-dependent.

Gut microbes
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

Alterations in intestinal permeability and the gut microbiome caused by alcohol abuse are associated with alcoholic liver disease and with worsening of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) symptoms. To resolve the direct effects of chronic ethanol consumption on the colon and its microbiome in the absence of acute or chronic alcohol-induced liver disease, we developed a mouse model of chronic binge drinking that uncovers how alcohol may enhance susceptibility to colitis via the microbiota. Employing daily ethanol gavage, we recapitulate key features of binge ethanol consumption. We found that binge ethanol drinking worsens intestinal infection, colonic injury and inflammation, and this effect persists beyond the drinking period. Using gnotobiotics, we showed that alcohol-driven susceptibility to colitis is microbiota-dependent and transferable to ethanol-naïve mice by microbiome transplantation. . expanded in binge drinking mice, and administration of was sufficient to enhance colitis in non-drinking mice. Our study provides a model to study binge drinking-microbiota interactions and their effects on host disease and reinforces the pathogenic function of spp. as colitogenic bacteria. Our findings illustrate how chronic binge drinking-induced alterations of the microbiome may affect susceptibility to IBD onset or flares.

Year of Publication
2024
Journal
Gut microbes
Volume
16
Issue
1
Pages
2392874
Date Published
12/2024
ISSN
1949-0984
DOI
10.1080/19490976.2024.2392874
PubMed ID
39163515
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