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Fatty Meal Interrupts Gut鈥檚 Communication With The Body, But Why?

If that second helping of holiday prime rib stuns your gut into silence, is that good or bad?

An enteroendocrine cell (green) lies within the epithelium (red) that lines the intestines of a zebrafish larvae. (Image by Lihua Ye)
An enteroendocrine cell (green) lies within the epithelium (red) that lines the intestines of a zebrafish larvae. (Image by Lihua Ye)

DURHAM, N.C. -- A high-fat meal can silence communication between the intestine and the rest of the body, according to a new 老牛影视 study in zebrafish.

While using the fish to examine cells that normally tell the brain and the rest of the body what鈥檚 going on inside the gut after a meal, a team of Duke researchers discovered that a high-fat meal completely shuts down that communication for a few hours.

The cells they were looking at are the enteroendocrine cells, which occur sparsely throughout the lining of the gut, but play a key role in signaling the body about the all-important alimentary canal. In addition to releasing hormones, the cells also have a recently-discovered direct connection to the nervous system and the brain.

These cells produce at least 15 different hormones to send signals to the rest of the body about gut movement, feelings of fullness, digestion, nutrient absorption, insulin sensitivity and energy storage.

鈥淏ut they fall asleep on the job for a few hours after a high-fat meal, and we don鈥檛 yet know if that鈥檚 good or bad,鈥 said John Rawls, an associate professor of molecular genetics and microbiology in the Duke School of Medicine.

Since enteroendocrine cells are key players in digestion, the feeling of being full and subsequent feeding behavior, this silencing may be a mechanism that somehow causes people eating a high-fat diet to eat even more.

鈥淭his is a previously unappreciated part of the postprandial (after-meal) cycle,鈥 Rawls said. 鈥淚f this happens every time we eat an unhealthy, high-fat meal, it might cause a change in insulin signaling, which could in turn contribute to the development of insulin resistance and Type 2 diabetes.鈥

To understand the silencing better, the researchers tried to break the process down step by step in zebrafish.

After they first sense a meal, the enteroendocrine cells trigger a calcium burst within seconds, initiating the signaling process. But after that initial signal there鈥檚 a delayed effect later in the after-meal period. It鈥檚 during this later response that the silencing occurs, said Rawls, who also directs

Enteroendocrine cells (red) are distributed within the intestinal epithelium (green) in a zebrafish larvae. (Image by Lihua Ye)
The silenced cells change shape and experience stress in their endoplasmic reticulum, a structure that assembles new proteins. It seems that these enteroendocrine cells, which are specialized to synthesize and secrete proteins like hormones and neurotransmitters, become overstimulated and exhausted for a while.

The team tried the high-fat diet on a line of germ-free zebrafish raised in the absence of any microbes, and found they didn鈥檛 experience the same silencing effect. So they began looking for gut microbes that might be involved in the process.

After screening through all the kinds of bacteria found in the gut, they saw that the silencing appeared to be the work of a single type of gut bacteria, called Acinetobacter. These bugs are normally less than 0.1 percent of the total gut microbiome, but they increased 100-fold after a high-fat meal and were the only bacteria able to induce the silencing effect.

鈥淣ext we want to understand how Acinetobacter evokes this interesting response,鈥 said Lihua Ye, a postdoctoral fellow and lead author on this paper. 鈥淲e also suspect other bacteria might also have this capability.鈥

Rawls said they aren鈥檛 sure why silencing occurs, nor whether it has any positive effect on the fish. It might be a way to prevent excessive signaling about the fat, but by being silenced completely like this, the cells won鈥檛 be communicating anything else either.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 understand yet what the long-term impact of enteroendocrine silencing would be on metabolic health,鈥 Rawls said. 鈥淭his may be a maladaptive response to high-fat feeding that impairs the normal regulatory functions of these cells, leading to metabolic disorders like insulin resistance. But it鈥檚 also possible that the silencing is a beneficial adaptation to protect the animal from over-stimulation of the gut cells.鈥

The study appeared as an at the open-access journal eLife on Dec. 3. This research was funded by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Disease (R01-DK093399, R01 DK109368, R01-DK081426) and the Pew Charitable Trusts.

CITATION: 鈥淗igh-Fat Diet Induces Microbiota-Dependent Silencing of Enteroendocrine Cells,鈥 Lihua Ye, Olaf Mueller, Jennifer Bagwell, Michel Bagnat, Rodger Liddle, John Rawls. eLife, Dec. 3, 2019. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.48479