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Publication : Imbalance of the intestinal virome and altered viral-bacterial interactions caused by a conditional deletion of the vitamin D receptor.

First Author  Zhang J Year  2021
Journal  Gut Microbes Volume  13
Issue  1 Pages  1957408
PubMed ID  34375154 Mgi Jnum  J:357885
Mgi Id  MGI:7541697 Doi  10.1080/19490976.2021.1957408
Citation  Zhang J, et al. (2021) Imbalance of the intestinal virome and altered viral-bacterial interactions caused by a conditional deletion of the vitamin D receptor. Gut Microbes 13(1):1957408
abstractText  Vitamin D receptor (VDR) deficiency is associated with cancer, infection, and chronic inflammation. Prior research has demonstrated VDR regulation of bacteria; however, little is known regarding VDR and viruses. We hypothesize that VDR deficiency impacts on the intestinal virome and viral-bacterial interactions. We specifically deleted VDR from intestinal epithelial cells (VDR(DeltaIEC)), Paneth cells (VDR(DeltaPC)), and myeloid cells (VDR(DeltaLyz)) in mice. Feces were collected for shotgun metagenomic sequencing and metabolite profiling. To test the functional changes, we evaluated pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) and analyzed microbial metabolites. Vibrio phages, Lactobacillus phages, and Escherichia coli typing phages were significantly enriched in all three conditional VDR-knockout mice. In the VDR(DeltaLyz) mice, the levels of eight more virus species (2 enriched, 6 depleted) were significantly changed. Altered virus species were primarily observed in female VDR(DeltaLyz) (2 enriched, 3 depleted) versus male VDR(DeltaLyz) (1 enriched, 1 depleted). Altered alpha and beta diversity (family to species) were found in VDR(DeltaLyz). In VDR(DeltaIEC) mice, bovine viral diarrhea virus 1 was significantly enriched. A significant correlation between viral and bacterial alterations was found in conditional VDR knockout mice. There was a positive correlation between Vibrio phage JSF5 and Cutibacterium acnes in VDR(DeltaPC) and VDR(DeltaLyz) mice. Also, there were more altered viral species in female conditional VDR knockout mice. Notably, there were significant changes in PRRs: upregulated TLR3, TLR7, and NOD2 in VDR(DeltaLyz) mice and increased CLEC4L expression in VDR(DeltaIEC) and VDR(DeltaPC) mice. Furthermore, we identified metabolites related to virus infection: decreased glucose in VDR(DeltaIEC) mice, increased ribulose/xylulose and xylose in VDR(DeltaLyz) mice, and increased long-chain fatty acids in VDR(DeltaIEC) and VDR(DeltaLyz) female mice. Tissue-specific deletion of VDR changes the virome and functionally changes viral receptors, which leads to dysbiosis, metabolic dysfunction, and infection risk. This study helps to elucidate VDR regulating the virome in a tissue-specific and sex-specific manner.
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