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Early-Life Gut Microbes May Protect Against Diabetes, Research in Mice Suggests

Media Contact:

Sophia Friesen
Manager, Research Communications, СAPP
Email: sophia.friesen@hsc.utah.edu

The microbiome shapes development of insulin-producing cells in infancy, leading to long-term changes in metabolism and diabetes risk, new research in mice has found.
 
The results could ultimately help doctors reduce the risk of type 1 diabetes—or potentially even restore lost metabolic function in adulthood—by providing specific gut microbes that help the pancreas grow and heal.
 

Key Points

  • Having specific kinds of microbes in the gut in infancy may lower the risk of diabetes, according to research in mice.
  • At-risk male mice were six times less likely to develop diabetes if they had been exposed to a specific microscopic fungus.
  • The fungus also appears to help reverse existing damage to the pancreas and restore insulin production in adulthood.

IMPACT: The research could eventually lead to microbe-based therapies to prevent and treat type 1 diabetes, which affects 2 million Americans.

Fluorescent microscope image of red and green cells in the pancreas.
Fluorescent microscope image of a mouse pancreatic islet, the part of the pancreas that makes insulin. Credit: Jennifer Hill and the Round Lab

The critical window

Mice that are exposed to broad-spectrum antibiotics in early life have worse metabolic health in the long term, the researchers found. If the mice received antibiotics during a 10-day window shortly after birth, they developed fewer beta cells—insulin-producing cells in the pancreas that regulate blood sugar. The antibiotic-treated mice also had higher levels of blood sugar and lower levels of insulin in adulthood.
 
“This, to me, was shocking and a bit scary,” says professor of pathology at СAPP and one of the senior authors on the study. “It showed how important the microbiota is during this very short early period of development.”

By testing a variety of antibiotics that affect different types of microbes, the researchers pinpointed several specific microbes that increased the amount of insulin-producing tissue and the level of insulin in the blood. Intriguingly, one of these metabolism-boosting microbes is a largely unstudied fungus called Candida dubliniensis, which isn’t found in healthy human adults but may be more common in infants.

A person in a lab coat and silver earrings looks contemplatively at a petri dish.
June Round inspects a dish of microbes cultured from the gut. Credit: Charlie Ehlert / СAPP

Crucially, C. dubliniensis exposure in early life also dramatically reduced the risk of type 1 diabetes for at-risk male mice. When male mice that were genetically predisposed to develop type 1 diabetes were colonized by a metabolically “neutral” microbe in infancy, they developed the СAPP 90% of the time. Their compatriots that were colonized with the fungus developed diabetes less than 15% of the time.
 
Exposure to C. dubliniensis could even help a damaged pancreas recover, the researchers found. When researchers introduced the fungus to adult mice whose insulin-producing cells had been killed off, the insulin-producing cells regenerated and metabolic function improved. The researchers emphasize that this is highly unusual: this kind of cell normally doesn’t grow during adulthood.
 
“One possibility in the far future is that maybe signals like these could be harnessed not only as a preventative but also as a therapeutic to help later in life,” says first author on the study, who led the research as a postdoctoral scientist in the Round Lab at the U. Hill is now an assistant professor in molecular, cellular, and developmental biology at University of Colorado Boulder.
 
If the benefits seen in mice hold true in humans, microbe-derived molecules might eventually help restore pancreatic function in people with diabetes. But Hill cautions that treatments that help beta cells regenerate in mice historically have not led to improvements for human health.

An immune system boost

Microscope image of blue and brown cells in the pancreas.
Microscope image of mouse pancreatic tissue, with insulin-producing tissue marked in brown. Credit: Jennifer Hill and the Round Lab

The C. dubliniensis fungus appears to support insulin-producing cells via its effects on the immune system. Previous research had shown that immune cells in the pancreas can promote the development of their insulin-producing neighbors. The researchers found that mice without a microbiome have fewer immune cells in the pancreas and worse metabolic function in adulthood.
 
When such mice get a booster of C. dubliniensis in early life, both their pancreatic immune cells and their metabolic function are back to normal. And C. dubliniensis can only promote the growth of insulin-producing cells in mice that have macrophages, showing that the fungus promotes metabolic health by affecting the immune system.
 
The researchers emphasize that there are probably other microbes that confer similar benefits as C. dubliniensis. Their new findings could provide a foot in the door for understanding how similar health cues from other microbes might function. “We don’t know a lot about how the microbiome is impacting early-life health,” Hill says. “But we’re finding that these early-life signals do impact early development, and then, on top of that, have long-term consequences for metabolic health.”
 
Round adds that understanding how the microbiome impacts metabolism could potentially lead to microbe-based treatments to prevent type 1 diabetes. “What I hope will eventually happen is that we're going to identify these important microbes,” she says, “and we'll be able to give them to infants so that we can perhaps prevent this СAPP from happening altogether.”

 

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These results were published in Science as
 
associate professor of human genetics at U of U Health, and research assistant professor in pathology at U of U Health, are also senior authors on this paper.
 
Research was funded by the National Institutes of Health (award numbers S10OD026959, 1K99DK133625-01A1, R01DK124336, R01DK124317 and R01AT011423), the UU Developmental Biology Training Grant (2T32 HD007491-21), the JDRF Postdoctoral Fellowship (3-PDF-2019-747-A-N), and by the Helmsley Foundation, Burroughs Wellcome Fund, and the Keck Foundation. This content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health or of the JDRF.