Publication | Open Access
<i>Akkermansia muciniphila</i> induces intestinal adaptive immune responses during homeostasis
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Citations
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References
2019
Year
Akkermansia muciniphila is linked to protection from obesity, improved wound healing, and stronger antitumor responses, illustrating how gut context shapes anticommensal immunity, unlike most responses that rely on T‑cell‑independent IgA production. Using a defined gnotobiotic model, the authors showed that A. muciniphila‑specific T cells expanded only in the presence of the bacterium. The bacterium elicits antigen‑specific IgG1 antibodies that require CD4+ T‑cell help, with helper‑phenotype T cells expanding in defined conditions, while conventional microbiota also provoke pro‑inflammatory A.
Context shapes anticommensal immunity The gut bacterium Akkermansia muciniphila is associated with protection from obesity, enhanced wound healing, and augmented antitumor responses. Ansaldo et al. found that this microbe induces antigen-specific immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) antibodies generated by B cells with CD4 + T cell help. This is in contrast to most anticommensal responses, which involve the T cell–independent production of IgA antibodies. In a gnotobiotic setting in which all components of the microbiome are defined, A. muciniphila –specific T cells expanded only when A. muciniphila was present. The T cells primarily displayed a phenotype associated with B cell help. However, in mice with a conventional gut microbiota, other proinflammatory A. muciniphila –specific T cell populations also expanded. Thus, anti– A. muciniphila immunity is context dependent, which may explain the variable immune responses to this microbe reported in patients. Science , this issue p. 1179
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