Publications by authors named "Ophelie Uriot"

Enterohemorrhagic (EHEC) is a major food-borne pathogen that causes human disease ranging from diarrhea to life-threatening complications. Accumulating evidence demonstrates that the Western diet enhances the susceptibility to enteric infection in mice, but the effect of diet on EHEC colonization and the role of human gut microbiota remains unknown. Our research aimed to investigate the effects of a Standard versus a Western diet on EHEC colonization in the human Mucosal ARtificial COLon (M-ARCOL) and the associated changes in the gut microbiota composition and activities.

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Recent advances in the human microbiome characterization have revealed significant oral microbial detection in stools of dysbiotic patients. However, little is known about the potential interactions of these invasive oral microorganisms with commensal intestinal microbiota and the host. In this proof-of-concept study, we proposed a new model of oral-to-gut invasion by the combined use of an model simulating both the physicochemical and microbial (lumen- and mucus-associated microbes) parameters of the human colon (M-ARCOL), a salivary enrichment protocol, and whole-metagenome shotgun sequencing.

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The intestinal mucus layer has a dual role in human health constituting a well-known microbial niche that supports gut microbiota maintenance but also acting as a physical barrier against enteric pathogens. Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC), the major agent responsible for traveler's diarrhea, is able to bind and degrade intestinal mucins, representing an important but understudied virulent trait of the pathogen. Using a set of complementary in vitro approaches simulating the human digestive environment, this study aimed to describe how the mucus microenvironment could shape different aspects of the human ETEC strain H10407 pathophysiology, namely its survival, adhesion, virulence gene expression, interleukin-8 induction and interactions with human fecal microbiota.

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Despite promising health effects, the probiotic status of a lactic acid bacterium widely used in dairy industry, requires further documentation of its physiological status during human gastrointestinal passage. This study aimed to apply recombinant-based in vivo technology (R-IVET) to identify genes triggered in a LMD-9 reference strain under simulated digestive conditions. First, the R-IVET chromosomal cassette and plasmid genomic library were designed to positively select activated genes.

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Due to obvious ethical and technical reasons, it remains very difficult to evaluate the survival and expression of virulence genes of food-borne pathogens, such as Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) in the human gastrointestinal tract. Here, we describe the use of the dynamic TNO (Toegepast Natuurwetenschappelijk Onderzoek) gastrointestinal model (TIM-1) as a powerful in vitro tool to obtain the kinetics of STEC survival by plate counting, the regulation of major virulence genes by RT-qPCR, and the production of Shiga toxins by ELISA, in the human stomach and small intestine. The gut model was adapted in order that in vitro digestions were performed both under adult and child digestive conditions, specific at risk populations for STEC infections.

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Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is an innovative therapy already used in humans to treat infections associated with massive use of antibiotics. Clinical studies are obviously the gold standard to evaluate FMT efficiency but remain limited by regulatory, ethics, and cost constraints. In the present study, an in vitro model of the human colon reproducing medically relevant perturbation of the colonic ecosystem by antibiotherapy was used to compare the efficiency of traditional FMT enema formulations and a new oral capsule in restoring gut microbiota composition and activity.

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In vitro gut models, such as the mucosal artificial colon (M-ARCOL), provide timely and cost-efficient alternatives to in vivo assays allowing mechanistic studies to better understand the role of human microbiome in health and disease. Using such models inoculated with human fecal samples may require a critical step of stool storage. The effects of preservation methods on microbial structure and function in in vitro gut models have been poorly investigated.

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Streptococcus thermophilus, a lactic acid bacterium used to produce yogurts and cheeses is more and more considered for its potential probiotic properties. This implies that additional information should be obtained regarding its survival and metabolic activity in the human Gastro-Intestinal Tract (GIT). In this study, we screened 30 S.

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