AI Article Synopsis

  • Chronic stress makes mice more susceptible to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) by affecting their immune response and gut microbiota.
  • Key immune cells increase in the colon during stress, and stress activates a specific signaling pathway (IL-6/STAT3) linked to inflammation, even in models lacking IL-6.
  • Stress also alters gut bacteria composition and reduces important protective substances, with evidence that stress-related immune changes can be reversed through cohousing and antibiotics, highlighting the gut microbiota's crucial role in IBD.

Article Abstract

Chronic stress is known to promote inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), but the underlying mechanism remains largely unresolved. Here, we found chronic stress to sensitize mice to dextran sulfate sodium (DSS)-induced colitis; to increase the infiltration of B cells, neutrophils, and proinflammatory ly6C macrophages in colonic lamina propria; and to present with decreased thymus and mesenteric lymph node (MLN) coefficients. Circulating total white blood cells were significantly increased after stress, and the proportion of MLN-associated immune cells were largely changed. Results showed a marked activation of IL-6/STAT3 signaling by stress. The detrimental action of stress was not terminated in IL-6 mice. Interestingly, the composition of gut microbiota was dramatically changed after stress, with expansion of inflammation-promoting bacteria. Furthermore, results showed stress-induced deficient expression of mucin-2 and lysozyme, which may contribute to the disorder of gut microbiota. Of note is that, in the case of cohousing, the stress-induced immune reaction and decreased body weight were abrogated, and transferred gut microbiota from stressed mice to control mice was sufficient to facilitate DSS-induced colitis. The important role of gut microbiota was further reinforced by broad-spectrum antibiotic treatment. Taken together, our results reveal that chronic stress disturbs gut microbiota, triggering immune system response and facilitating DSS-induced colitis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5879702PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1720696115DOI Listing

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