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Giardia hinders growth by disrupting nutrient metabolism independent of inflammatory enteropathy

Giardia hinders growth by disrupting nutrient metabolism independent of inflammatory enteropathy
Giardia hinders growth by disrupting nutrient metabolism independent of inflammatory enteropathy

Giardia lamblia (Giardia) is among the most common intestinal pathogens in children in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Although Giardia associates with early-life linear growth restriction, mechanistic explanations for Giardia-associated growth impairments remain elusive. Unlike other intestinal pathogens associated with constrained linear growth that cause intestinal or systemic inflammation or both, Giardia seldom associates with chronic inflammation in these children. Here we leverage the MAL-ED longitudinal birth cohort and a model of Giardia mono-association in gnotobiotic and immunodeficient mice to propose an alternative pathogenesis of this parasite. In children, Giardia results in linear growth deficits and gut permeability that are dose-dependent and independent of intestinal markers of inflammation. The estimates of these findings vary between children in different MAL-ED sites. In a representative site, where Giardia associates with growth restriction, infected children demonstrate broad amino acid deficiencies, and overproduction of specific phenolic acids, byproducts of intestinal bacterial amino acid metabolism. Gnotobiotic mice require specific nutritional and environmental conditions to recapitulate these findings, and immunodeficient mice confirm a pathway independent of chronic T/B cell inflammation. Taken together, we propose a new paradigm that Giardia-mediated growth faltering is contingent upon a convergence of this intestinal protozoa with nutritional and intestinal bacterial factors.

2041-1723
Giallourou, Natasa
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Arnold, Jason
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McQuade, Elizabeth T. Rogawski
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Awoniyi, Muyiwa
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Becket, Rose Viguna Thomas
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Walsh, Kenneth
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Herzog, Jeremy
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Gulati, Ajay S.
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Carroll, Ian M.
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Montgomery, Stephanie
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Quintela, Pedro Henrique
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Faust, Angela M.
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Singer, Steven M.
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Fodor, Anthony A.
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Ahmad, Tahmeed
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Mahfuz, Mustafa
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Mduma, Esto
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Walongo, Thomas
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Guerrant, Richard L.
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Balfour Sartor, R.
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Swann, Jonathan R.
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Kosek, Margaret N.
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Bartelt, Luther A.
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Giallourou, Natasa
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Arnold, Jason
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McQuade, Elizabeth T. Rogawski
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Awoniyi, Muyiwa
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Becket, Rose Viguna Thomas
43028d22-187b-45db-ab16-0bba56cdf565
Walsh, Kenneth
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Herzog, Jeremy
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Gulati, Ajay S.
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Carroll, Ian M.
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Montgomery, Stephanie
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Quintela, Pedro Henrique
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Faust, Angela M.
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Singer, Steven M.
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Fodor, Anthony A.
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Ahmad, Tahmeed
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Mahfuz, Mustafa
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Mduma, Esto
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Walongo, Thomas
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Guerrant, Richard L.
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Balfour Sartor, R.
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Swann, Jonathan R.
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Kosek, Margaret N.
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Bartelt, Luther A.
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Giallourou, Natasa, Arnold, Jason, McQuade, Elizabeth T. Rogawski, Awoniyi, Muyiwa, Becket, Rose Viguna Thomas, Walsh, Kenneth, Herzog, Jeremy, Gulati, Ajay S., Carroll, Ian M., Montgomery, Stephanie, Quintela, Pedro Henrique, Faust, Angela M., Singer, Steven M., Fodor, Anthony A., Ahmad, Tahmeed, Mahfuz, Mustafa, Mduma, Esto, Walongo, Thomas, Guerrant, Richard L., Balfour Sartor, R., Swann, Jonathan R., Kosek, Margaret N. and Bartelt, Luther A. (2023) Giardia hinders growth by disrupting nutrient metabolism independent of inflammatory enteropathy. Nature Communications, 14, [2840]. (doi:10.1038/s41467-023-38363-2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Giardia lamblia (Giardia) is among the most common intestinal pathogens in children in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Although Giardia associates with early-life linear growth restriction, mechanistic explanations for Giardia-associated growth impairments remain elusive. Unlike other intestinal pathogens associated with constrained linear growth that cause intestinal or systemic inflammation or both, Giardia seldom associates with chronic inflammation in these children. Here we leverage the MAL-ED longitudinal birth cohort and a model of Giardia mono-association in gnotobiotic and immunodeficient mice to propose an alternative pathogenesis of this parasite. In children, Giardia results in linear growth deficits and gut permeability that are dose-dependent and independent of intestinal markers of inflammation. The estimates of these findings vary between children in different MAL-ED sites. In a representative site, where Giardia associates with growth restriction, infected children demonstrate broad amino acid deficiencies, and overproduction of specific phenolic acids, byproducts of intestinal bacterial amino acid metabolism. Gnotobiotic mice require specific nutritional and environmental conditions to recapitulate these findings, and immunodeficient mice confirm a pathway independent of chronic T/B cell inflammation. Taken together, we propose a new paradigm that Giardia-mediated growth faltering is contingent upon a convergence of this intestinal protozoa with nutritional and intestinal bacterial factors.

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s41467-023-38363-2 - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 27 April 2023
Published date: 18 May 2023
Additional Information: Funding Information: Access to the UNC National Gnotobiotic Rodent Resource Center, Gnotobiotic Core and the University of Pennsylvania Microbial Culture and Metabolomics Core were possible through NIH/P4O0D010995 (RBS) and the Center for Gastrointestinal Biology and Diseases (CGIBD) (NIH/NIDDK: P30 DK034987, Robert S. Sandler, PI). Funding for human amino acids and metabolomics profiling was provided by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation through OPP 1066146 (MNK) and MAL-ED was funded to the Fogarty Foundation (OPP47075). Mouse studies were funded by NIAID (K08AI108730 and R01AI151214, LAB) and NIDDK (P30 DK034987 Pilot Award to LAB, Robert S. Sandler, PI; 4O0D010995 (RBS), Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation (RBS), and the Global Probiotics Council Young Investigators in Probiotics Award (LAB).

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 477314
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477314
ISSN: 2041-1723
PURE UUID: 47363563-6b68-4266-baf0-6fc6f30a0d31
ORCID for Jonathan R. Swann: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6485-4529

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Date deposited: 02 Jun 2023 17:14
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:01

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Contributors

Author: Natasa Giallourou
Author: Jason Arnold
Author: Elizabeth T. Rogawski McQuade
Author: Muyiwa Awoniyi
Author: Rose Viguna Thomas Becket
Author: Kenneth Walsh
Author: Jeremy Herzog
Author: Ajay S. Gulati
Author: Ian M. Carroll
Author: Stephanie Montgomery
Author: Pedro Henrique Quintela
Author: Angela M. Faust
Author: Steven M. Singer
Author: Anthony A. Fodor
Author: Tahmeed Ahmad
Author: Mustafa Mahfuz
Author: Esto Mduma
Author: Thomas Walongo
Author: Richard L. Guerrant
Author: R. Balfour Sartor
Author: Margaret N. Kosek
Author: Luther A. Bartelt

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