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The HMI™ module: a new tool to study the Host-Microbiota Interaction in the human gastrointestinal tract in vitro
by
Verstraete, Willy
, Marzorati, Massimo
, Vanhoecke, Barbara
, De Ryck, Tine
, Pieters, Jan
, Sadaghian Sadabad, Mehdi
, Possemiers, Sam
, Harmsen, Hermie J
, Hennebel, Tom
, Pinheiro, Iris
, Van de Wiele, Tom
, Van den Abbeele, Pieter
, Derycke, Lara
, Bracke, Marc
in
Bacteria
/ Biofilms
/ Biological Microscopy
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Cell culture
/ Cytokines
/ Ecosystems
/ Epithelial Cells - microbiology
/ Epithelial Cells - physiology
/ Experiments
/ Fermentation
/ Gastrointestinal tract
/ Gastrointestinal Tract - microbiology
/ Humans
/ Life Sciences
/ Medical research
/ Metabolites
/ Methodology
/ Methodology Article
/ Microbe-host interactions and microbial pathogenicity
/ Microbiology
/ Microbiota - physiology
/ Models, Biological
/ Mycology
/ Parasitology
/ Physiological aspects
/ Shear stress
/ Virology
/ Yeasts
2014
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The HMI™ module: a new tool to study the Host-Microbiota Interaction in the human gastrointestinal tract in vitro
by
Verstraete, Willy
, Marzorati, Massimo
, Vanhoecke, Barbara
, De Ryck, Tine
, Pieters, Jan
, Sadaghian Sadabad, Mehdi
, Possemiers, Sam
, Harmsen, Hermie J
, Hennebel, Tom
, Pinheiro, Iris
, Van de Wiele, Tom
, Van den Abbeele, Pieter
, Derycke, Lara
, Bracke, Marc
in
Bacteria
/ Biofilms
/ Biological Microscopy
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Cell culture
/ Cytokines
/ Ecosystems
/ Epithelial Cells - microbiology
/ Epithelial Cells - physiology
/ Experiments
/ Fermentation
/ Gastrointestinal tract
/ Gastrointestinal Tract - microbiology
/ Humans
/ Life Sciences
/ Medical research
/ Metabolites
/ Methodology
/ Methodology Article
/ Microbe-host interactions and microbial pathogenicity
/ Microbiology
/ Microbiota - physiology
/ Models, Biological
/ Mycology
/ Parasitology
/ Physiological aspects
/ Shear stress
/ Virology
/ Yeasts
2014
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The HMI™ module: a new tool to study the Host-Microbiota Interaction in the human gastrointestinal tract in vitro
by
Verstraete, Willy
, Marzorati, Massimo
, Vanhoecke, Barbara
, De Ryck, Tine
, Pieters, Jan
, Sadaghian Sadabad, Mehdi
, Possemiers, Sam
, Harmsen, Hermie J
, Hennebel, Tom
, Pinheiro, Iris
, Van de Wiele, Tom
, Van den Abbeele, Pieter
, Derycke, Lara
, Bracke, Marc
in
Bacteria
/ Biofilms
/ Biological Microscopy
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Cell culture
/ Cytokines
/ Ecosystems
/ Epithelial Cells - microbiology
/ Epithelial Cells - physiology
/ Experiments
/ Fermentation
/ Gastrointestinal tract
/ Gastrointestinal Tract - microbiology
/ Humans
/ Life Sciences
/ Medical research
/ Metabolites
/ Methodology
/ Methodology Article
/ Microbe-host interactions and microbial pathogenicity
/ Microbiology
/ Microbiota - physiology
/ Models, Biological
/ Mycology
/ Parasitology
/ Physiological aspects
/ Shear stress
/ Virology
/ Yeasts
2014
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The HMI™ module: a new tool to study the Host-Microbiota Interaction in the human gastrointestinal tract in vitro
Journal Article
The HMI™ module: a new tool to study the Host-Microbiota Interaction in the human gastrointestinal tract in vitro
2014
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Overview
Background
Recent scientific developments have shed more light on the importance of the host-microbe interaction, particularly in the gut. However, the mechanistic study of the host-microbe interplay is complicated by the intrinsic limitations in reaching the different areas of the gastrointestinal tract (GIT)
in vivo
. In this paper, we present the technical validation of a new device - the Host-Microbiota Interaction (HMI) module - and the evidence that it can be used in combination with a gut dynamic simulator to evaluate the effect of a specific treatment at the level of the luminal microbial community and of the host surface colonization and signaling.
Results
The HMI module recreates conditions that are physiologically relevant for the GIT: i) a mucosal area to which bacteria can adhere under relevant shear stress (3 dynes cm
−2
); ii) the bilateral transport of low molecular weight metabolites (4 to 150 kDa) with permeation coefficients ranging from 2.4 × 10
−6
to 7.1 × 10
−9
cm sec
−1
; and iii) microaerophilic conditions at the bottom of the growing biofilm (PmO
2
= 2.5 × 10
−4
cm sec
−1
). In a long-term study, the host’s cells in the HMI module were still viable after a 48-hour exposure to a complex microbial community. The dominant mucus-associated microbiota differed from the luminal one and its composition was influenced by the treatment with a dried product derived from yeast fermentation. The latter - with known anti-inflammatory properties - induced a decrease of pro-inflammatory IL-8 production between 24 and 48 h.
Conclusions
The study of the
in vivo
functionality of adhering bacterial communities in the human GIT and of the localized effect on the host is frequently hindered by the complexity of reaching particular areas of the GIT. The HMI module offers the possibility of co-culturing a gut representative microbial community with enterocyte-like cells up to 48 h and may therefore contribute to the mechanistic understanding of host-microbiome interactions.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V
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