Journal article

Mucolytic bacteria with increased prevalence in IBD mucosa augment in vitro utilization of mucin by other bacteria

CW Png, SK Lindén, KS Gilshenan, EG Zoetendal, CS McSweeney, LI Sly, MA McGuckin, THJ Florin

American Journal of Gastroenterology | LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS | Published : 2010

Abstract

Objectives: Mucosa-associated bacteria are increased in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), which suggests the possibility of an increased source of digestible endogenous mucus substrate. We hypothesized that mucolytic bacteria are increased in IBD, providing increased substrate to sustain nonmucolytic mucosa-associated bacteria. Methods: Mucolytic bacteria were characterized by the ability to degrade human secretory mucin (MUC2) in pure and mixed anaerobic cultures. Real-time PCR was used to enumerate mucosa-associated mucolytic bacteria in 46 IBD and 20 control patients. Bacterial mucolytic activity was tested in vitro using purified human MUC2. Results: We confirm increased total mucosa-ass..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Broad Medical Research Program (BMRP)


Awarded by Australian NHMRC


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the Broad Medical Research Program (BMRP 0033); Australian NHMRC Project Grants 382309, 488809, and 511204; Australian NHMRC Clinical Practitioner Fellowship to Timothy H.J. Florin; and the University of Queensland Joint Research Scholarship to Chin Wen Png.