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Active HORIZON European Commission

Deciphering host-gut microbiota spatio-functional plasticity in inflammation

€2M EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Technion - Israel Institute of Technology
Country Israel
Start Date Feb 01, 2023
End Date Jan 31, 2028
Duration 1,825 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Coordinator
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101078712
Grant Description

Over the past two decades, gut bacteria have emerged as major regulators of human health.

The focus in the field thus far has been on bacterial taxonomy, with their spatial organization and functionality largely overlooked.

Crohns disease (CD) vividly portrays this spatiofunctional dimension, as it features patches of gut inflammation (skip lesions) surrounded by uninflamed regionsin the same hostwith a clear demarcation but unknown cause.

Our preliminary data demonstrate host-microbe functional feedback loops in which bacterial strains can adapt and modify their immunomodulatory functions in response to the host. Moreover, we find functional alterations in gut bacteria of IBD patients.

Thus, we hypothesize that bacterial spatio-functionality can be largely affected by host physiology, and, in turn, modulate the pathophysiological state, creating a functional feedback loop.We propose to study bacterial spatiofunctional plasticity and mechanisms of host-microbe interactions in CD, and their potential causal effects on inflammation, combining microbiology, immunology and systems biology approaches.

We intend to focus on three independent yet complementary aims: (1) Characterize host-microbe spatio-functional alterations in skip lesions and assess their potential causal effects on inflammation; (2) Decipher the functional and molecular mechanisms of host-microbe feedback loops in healthy and inflamed intestines; and (3) Develop a toolbox for high-resolution functional analyses of gut bacteria directly in their natural environments.This study will address, for the first time, bacterial functional plasticity in response to host inflammation, unveiling the phenomena, its mechanism of action, and potential causal effects on gut inflammation.

Such understanding can shift our perception on microbiota-host interactions, may explain contradictions in the field, point to novel contributing factors to CD and related disorders, and guide future translational studies.

All Grantees

Technion - Israel Institute of Technology

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