Author
Listed:
- Winston W. Liu
(Duke University
Duke University
Duke University
Stanford University School of Medicine)
- Naama Reicher
(Duke University
Duke University)
- Emily Alway
(Duke University
Duke University
Duke University)
- Laura E. Rupprecht
(Duke University
Duke University)
- Peter Weng
(Duke University
Duke University
Duke University)
- Chloe Schaefgen
(Duke University
Duke University)
- Marguerita E. Klein
(Duke University
Duke University
Duke University)
- Jorge A. Villalobos
(Duke University
Duke University)
- Carlos Puerto-Hernandez
(Duke University
Duke University)
- Yolanda Graciela Kiesling Altún
(Duke University
Duke University)
- Amanda Carbajal
(Duke University
Duke University)
- José Alfredo Aguayo-Guerrero
(Duke University
Duke University
General Hospital of Mexico Dr. Eduardo Liceaga)
- Alam Coss
(Duke University
Duke University)
- Atharva Sahasrabudhe
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
- Polina Anikeeva
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
- Alan Araujo
(Monell Chemical Senses Center
University of Pennsylvania)
- Avnika Bali
(Monell Chemical Senses Center
University of Pennsylvania)
- Guillaume Lartigue
(Monell Chemical Senses Center
University of Pennsylvania)
- Elvi Gil-Lievana
(CINVESTAV
CINVESTAV Sede Sur)
- Ranier Gutierrez
(CINVESTAV
CINVESTAV Sede Sur)
- Edward A. Miao
(Duke University
Duke University
Duke University
Duke University)
- John F. Rawls
(Duke University
Duke University
Duke University)
- M. Maya Kaelberer
(Duke University
Duke University
Duke University
University of Arizona)
- Diego V. Bohórquez
(Duke University
Duke University
Duke University
Duke University)
Abstract
To coexist with its resident microorganisms, the host must have a sense to adjust its behaviour in response to them. In the intestine, a sense for nutrients transduced to the brain through neuroepithelial circuits guides appetitive choices1–5. However, a sense that allows the host to respond in real time to stimuli arising from resident gut microorganisms remains to be uncovered. Here we show that in the mouse colon, the ubiquitous microbial pattern flagellin—a unifying feature across phyla6—stimulates Toll-like receptor 5 (TLR5) in peptide YY (PYY)-labelled colonic neuropod cells. This stimulation leads to PYY release onto NPY2R vagal nodose neurons to regulate feeding. Mice lacking TLR5 in these cells eat more and gain more weight than controls. We found that flagellin does not act on the nerve directly. Instead, flagellin stimulates neuropod cells from the colonic lumen to reduce feeding through a gut–brain sensory neural circuit. Moreover, flagellin reduces feeding independent of immune responses, metabolic changes or the presence of gut microbiota. This sense enables the host to adjust its behaviour in response to a molecular pattern from its resident microorganisms. We call this sense at the interface of the biota and the brain the neurobiotic sense7.
Suggested Citation
Winston W. Liu & Naama Reicher & Emily Alway & Laura E. Rupprecht & Peter Weng & Chloe Schaefgen & Marguerita E. Klein & Jorge A. Villalobos & Carlos Puerto-Hernandez & Yolanda Graciela Kiesling Altún, 2025.
"A gut sense for a microbial pattern regulates feeding,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 645(8081), pages 729-736, September.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:645:y:2025:i:8081:d:10.1038_s41586-025-09301-7
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09301-7
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