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Inulin-gel-based oral immunotherapy remodels the small intestinal microbiome and suppresses food allergy.

Kai Han, Fang Xie, Olamide Animasahun, Minal Nenwani, Sho Kitamoto et al.
Other Nature materials 2024 28 citações
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo de Estudo
Other
População
Food allergy mouse models
Intervenção
Inulin-gel-based oral immunotherapy remodels the small intestinal microbiome and suppresses food allergy. None
Comparador
Allergen alone
Desfecho Primário
Oral tolerance and food allergy suppression
Direção do Efeito
Positive
Risco de Viés
Unclear

Abstract

Despite the potential of oral immunotherapy against food allergy, adverse reactions and loss of desensitization hinder its clinical uptake. Dysbiosis of the gut microbiota is implicated in the increasing prevalence of food allergy, which will need to be regulated to enable for an effective oral immunotherapy against food allergy. Here we report an inulin gel formulated with an allergen that normalizes the dysregulated ileal microbiota and metabolites in allergic mice, establishes allergen-specific oral tolerance and achieves robust oral immunotherapy efficacy with sustained unresponsiveness in food allergy models. These positive outcomes are associated with enhanced allergen uptake by antigen-sampling dendritic cells in the small intestine, suppressed pathogenic type 2 immune responses, increased interferon-γ+ and interleukin-10+ regulatory T cell populations, and restored ileal abundances of Eggerthellaceae and Enterorhabdus in allergic mice. Overall, our findings underscore the therapeutic potential of the engineered allergen gel as a suitable microbiome-modulating platform for food allergy and other allergic diseases.

Resumo Rápido

An inulin gel formulated with an allergen that normalizes the dysregulated ileal microbiota and metabolites in allergic mice, establishes allergen-specific oral tolerance and achieves robust oral immunotherapy efficacy with sustained unresponsiveness in food allergy models is reported.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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