Gary B. Huffnagle
University of Michigan Medical School
Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S.A.
Mairi C. Noverr
Wayne State University
Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A.
ISBN: 978-0-387-79989-6
Pub Date: August 11, 2008
Pages: 166
Color Pages: 1
Figures: 29
Tables: 9
Print ThisThe idea that the microbial communities within the GI tract have a profound influence on general human health actually originated with Russian scientist Elie Metchnikov at the turn of the last century. Also known as the “father of immunology”, Metchnikov believed that putrefactive bacteria in the gut were responsible for enhancing the aging process. He theorized that ingestion of healthy bacteria found in fermented foods could counteract toxic bacteria and was the key to good health. His theories concerning good bacteria and health can be found in his treatise “The Prolongation of Life: Optimistic Studies”. These writings prompted Japanese scientist Minoru Shirota to begin investigation of how fermentative bacteria improve health. He succeeded in isolating a strain of Lactobacillus that could survive passage through the intestine, while promoting a healthy balance of microbes. The “Shirota strain” is still used today in the fermented beverage Yakult. It is clear from a commercial standpoint that these ideas have inspired the development of a probiotic industry, which has expanded greatly in the U.S. over the past 5-10 years.
Likewise, scientific studies investigating the microbiota and the immune system have increased significantly in recent years. This increase is research is also due to advances in technologies that enable the investigation of large microbial communities, a resurgence in gnotobiotic animal research, and improved methods for molecular analysis of probiotic bacterial species. Our interest in this area stems from our laboratory observations indicating that antibiotics and fungi can skew microbiota composition and systemic immune responses. Our initial base of references upon which to develop further hypotheses concerning the mechanisms involved in microbiota regulation of immune responses was limited. However, in presenting the research at national scientific meetings and at universities across the country, the feedback and interest were overwhelming. It became clear that a book dedicated to current trends in investigating the GI microbiota was warranted. Dissection of the relationship between the microbiota and the immune system is currently being approached from a variety of angles that we have sought to incorporate into this book.
This book opens with two general reference chapters, which provide an overview of current knowledge of gastrointestinal immunology and the commensal microbiology of the gut. Next are two chapters dedicated to current methodologies used to investigate the microbiota and host: molecular analysis of microbial diversity and gnotobiotic research. Both positive and negative interactions between the microbiota and the immune system can take place in the gut, with chapters dedicated to probiotics and intestinal diseases associated with unhealthy microbiota. Environmental factors play an enormous role in shaping the microbiota composition. Host, microbial, and dietary factors take part in a complex interplay, which provides many distinct and diverse research subjects. We have included a chapter discussing diet, functional foods, and prebiotics, which are dietary supplements used to specifically enhance the growth of beneficial members of the microbiota. Several laboratories are investigating how the different members of the microbiota communicate with each other and with the immune system. A chapter reviewing how bacteria sense and respond to signaling compounds in the gut environment provides insight into the signal transduction pathways that mediate interactions between the host and microbiota. A highly detailed and well-investigated model of bacterial-host symbiosis provides an immense amount of background and insight for the developing field of host-microbiota studies. We have included a chapter reviewing the unique interactions that take place in a non-mammalian system, the Squid-Vibrio model. Finally, we close the book with two chapters outlining current hypotheses concerned with redefining our understanding of the relationship between microbes, disease, and the basic mechanisms of immune system function.
SECTION I. OVERVIEW CHAPTERS
1. Overview of Gut Immunology
Katie Lynn Mason, Gary B. Huffnagle,
Mairi C. Noverr and John Y. Kao
2. The Commensal Microbiology of the Gastrointestinal Tract
Janet M. Manson, Marcus Rauch and Michael
S. Gilmore
SECTION II. CURRENT TECHNIQUES
3. Overview of the Gastrointestinal Microbiota
Vincent B. Young and Thomas M. Schmidt
4. Effects of Microbiota on GI Health: Gnotobiotic Research
Robert Doug Wagner
SECTION III. INTERACTION WITH THE HOST
5. Positive Interactions with the Microbiota: Probiotics
Marko Kalliomäki, Seppo Salminen and
Erika Isolauri
6. Negative Interactions with the Microbiota: IBD
Nita H. Salzman and Charles L. Bevins
SECTION IV. ROLE OF THE DIET
7. Diet, Immunity and Functional Foods
Lesley Hoyles and Jelena Vulevic
SECTION V. HOST-MICROBE SIGNALING
8. Host‑Microbe
Communication within the GI Tract
Christopher A. Allen and Alfredo G. Torres
9. Host‑Microbe
Symbiosis: The Squid‑Vibrio
Association—A Naturally Occurring, Experimental Model of Animal/Bacterial
Partnerships
Margaret McFall‑Ngai
SECTION VI. HYPOTHESES
10. The “Microflora Hypothesis” of Allergic Disease
Andrew Shreiner, Gary B. Huffnagle and
Mairi C. Noverr
11. The Damage‑Response
Framework of Microbial Pathogenesis
and Infectious Diseases
Liise‑Anne
Pirofski and Arturo Casadevall