Gut microbial interaction networks control autoimmunity to neuroretina

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Abstract

The gut microbiome influences the development of immune-mediated inflammatory diseases, including autoimmune uveitis, a sight-threatening ocular inflammation driven by retina-specific T cells1. Using a model of spontaneous autoimmune uveitis (sEAU) we showed that gut commensals provide immune stimuli that trigger disease2. Here we report that uveitis-promoting microbes are present in human gut flora and that colonization of germ-free (GF) mice with commensals from healthy human donors was sufficient to provoke disease. Severity of sEAU correlated with expansion of Akkermansia and contraction of short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)–producing Firmicutes, followed by decreased SCFA levels and a dominant gut Th1 effector response. Mechanistic gain-of-function experiments, enriching GF sEAU mice with Akkermansia, reproduced these microbiome, metabolite and immune phenotype shifts, and exacerbated disease, suggesting that Akkermansia promotes autoimmunity by outcompeting SCFA-producers and enhancing Th1-type responses. An inverse correlation between Akkermansia (Verrucomicrobia) and Firmicutes was also present in patients with uveitis, multiple sclerosis and Crohn’s disease. These findings reveal a stereotypic gut microbial interaction network that regulates systemic immune balance, and may represent an ecologically conserved mechanism through which the gut microbiome modulates autoimmune and inflammatory diseases. *Amy Zhang & Reiko Horai share equal contribution.

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