Health & Medicine - Posted by Carole Gan-UC Davis on Friday, February 22, 2013 12:47 - 3 Comments    
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Why bad bacteria thrive in inflamed bowels

Estimates suggest 1.4 million Americans are affected by inflammatory bowel disease—which includes ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease—according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A new study finds that harmful bacteria, including E. coli, use nitrate—a byproduct formed during the intestinal inflammation in IBD—to grow and thrive. (Credit: Microbe Wolrd/Flickr)

UC DAVIS (US) — Researchers say they have a clearer picture of why “bad” bacteria flourish in the intestines of people with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).


The team discovered a biological mechanism by which harmful bacteria grow, edge out beneficial bacteria, and damage the gut in IBD. This new understanding, published in Science, may lead to treatments with fewer side effects than current therapies.

IBD begins when “good” bacteria are mistakenly killed by the immune system, while harmful bacteria multiply—resulting in inflammation and damage to the intestines, and chronic episodes of abdominal pain, cramping, diarrhea, and other changes in bowel habits.

Straight from the Source

Read the original study

DOI: 10.1126/science.1232467

In test-tube and animal studies, the researchers found that potentially harmful bacteria in the intestine called Enterobacteriaceae use nitrate—a byproduct formed during the intestinal inflammation in IBD—to grow and thrive.

Enterobacteriaceae strains include certain E. coli bacteria, which can worsen the intestinal damage of IBD. Eventually, the intestines of those with IBD become overrun by harmful bacteria, and the numbers of normal good bacteria in the gut decrease.

“Much like humans use oxygen, E. coli can use nitrate as a replacement for oxygen to respire, produce energy and grow,” says lead author Andreas Baumler, a professor of medical microbiology and immunology at University of California, Davis.

“In IBD, nitrate produced by inflammation in the gut allows E. coli to take a deep ‘breath,’ and beat out our beneficial microbes in the competition for nutrients,” he explains.

The inflammation in the intestines of those with IBD leads to the release of nitric oxide radicals that are powerful in attacking bacteria, Baumler explained. Yet these nitric oxide radicals are also very unstable, and eventually decompose into nitrate, which can be used by bacteria like E. coli to thrive and grow.

By contrast, good bacteria in the gut grow through fermentation—a much slower process.

Determining the reasons why bacteria like E. coli can edge out good bacteria in the gut is crucial for determining new ways to halt the IBD disease process.

Current treatments for IBD suppress the immune response through antibiotics, corticosteroids, or other powerful immune-modifying drugs. But long-term side effects can limit their use and their effectiveness for IBD patients.

The research indicates that targeting the molecular pathways that generate nitric oxide and nitrate, as well as other molecules that feed harmful gut bacteria, could calm down and normalize the intestinal environment in IBD. They are already doing research with one candidate drug that could halt the multiple pathways by which harmful bacteria thrive in IBD.

“The idea would be to inhibit all pathways that produce molecules that can be used by bacteria such as E. coli for respiration and growth,” Baumler says. “Essentially you could then smother the bacteria.”

Researchers from Texas A&M University also contributed to the study.

The California Agricultural Experiment Station and Public Health Service and the Faculty of Medicine, Chiang Mai University, Thailand, funded the study.

Source: University of California, Davis

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3 Comments

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IBDMom
Feb 22, 2013 17:16

Good summary of the article, very misleading headline– the confusion of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a serious problem for patients living with these diseases. It’s a common enough confusion that the principal voluntary health association for IBD, the Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation, has a web page devoted to it which you can find here:

http://www.ccfa.org/resources/ibs-and-ibd-two-very.html

Since this research is very clearly about IBD and not IBS, it would be appreciated it you could get the word “irritable” out of the title! Thanks!

Renate
Feb 23, 2013 21:42

I am very surprised to be told here that antibiotics “suppress the immune system”.

Isn’t the general public already confused enough about what antibiotics can or can not do?

Antibiotics are used to kill bacteria. Period.

Teri
Mar 7, 2013 23:35

I have been healed of UC by doing a home fecal transplant. I aquired UC in 2009 after taking a Zpack antibiotic for a sinus infection then a month or two later I had knee surgery, where I was given an antibiotic during surgery.

The very next day after surgery, I had explosive diarrhea, gas, cramps. Tests showed it was not C-diff or any other infection. Doctors said I would have to live with it for the rest of my life and take drugs the rest of my life that suppress my immune system.

I learned about the Specific Carbohydrate Diet and stopped eating all yeast, sugar, starch, wheat and lactose in May of 2012 after suffering for 3 years of bleeding, diarrhea, gas, cramps, etc. It was horrible.

The SCD diet did help but the stronger microbes began to die off, being starved from their regular diet of those things I quit eating and create a flare of my UC symptoms. After a two month flare I did a home fecal transplant.

I have been symptom free every since. I still eat SCD as I want to give my digestive system time to heal and for the good bacteria to get well established in my colon. I don’t want to ever go through this again.

I would recommend anyone with IBS, UC or Crohens to research fecal transplants and check out my blog – http://healed-from-uc.blogspot.com.

It had given me my life back.

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