Evidence that asthma is a developmental origin disease influenced by maternal diet and bacterial metabolites
Monash University · Central Queensland University · +9 more institutions
Abstract
Asthma is prevalent in Western countries, and recent explanations have evoked the actions of the gut microbiota. Here we show that feeding mice a high-fibre diet yields a distinctive gut microbiota, which increases the levels of the short-chain fatty acid, acetate. High-fibre or acetate-feeding led to marked suppression of allergic airways disease (AAD, a model for human asthma), by enhancing T-regulatory cell numbers and function. Acetate increases acetylation at the Foxp3 promoter, likely through HDAC9 inhibition. Epigenetic effects of fibre/acetate in adult mice led us to examine the influence of maternal intake of fibre/acetate. High-fibre/acetate feeding of pregnant mice imparts on their adult offspring…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.50
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 71
Authors
22Topics & keywords
- Asthma
- Offspring
- Gut flora
- Pregnancy
- Biology
- Immunology
- Fetus
- Disease
- Good health and well-being