Microbiota play an important role in the body's ability to accept transplanted skin and other organs, suggested researchers from the University of Chicago.
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‘Microbiota play an important role in the body's ability to accept transplanted skin and other organs.’
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Meanwhile, the team found that if germ-free mice were dosed with microbes from conventional, untreated mice, they rejected the skin grafts more quickly. But if they were dosed with the microbes that survived the antibiotic treatment of conventional mice, they retained the skin grafts similarly to sterile mice. This suggests the composition of the microbiota influences the fate of the graft. 
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"The species that form the community of microbes colonizing the mice-and supposedly humans too-have different effects," said Maria-Luisa Alegre, professor of medicine at the University of Chicago and co-senior author of the study. "One community of bacteria from the normal mice is capable of inducing accelerated rejection of a transplant, but another community of bacteria, those that are left after antibiotics, doesn't have that capacity."
Success rates for transplants of skin, lungs, and intestines-organs that are exposed to the outside world-are much worse than transplants of internal organs like kidneys and hearts, in both clinical settings for humans and in laboratory animals. One hypothesis has been that the difference may be due to the fact that skin, lungs, and intestines are colonized by microbiota and so-called sterile internal organs are not.
Alegre and her team, including graduate student and lead author Kevin Lei, tested this hypothesis by treating both donor and recipient mice with antibiotics for 10 days before performing skin transplants. The skin grafts survived roughly twice as long in the treated mice compared to controls (a mean survival time of 53 versus 27 days) and the specific immune response against the skin graft was decreased. Skin grafts between mice that had been raised in germ-free conditions also survived longer than controls.
By contrast, when germ-free mice were given fecal microbiota transfers from conventional, untreated mice, they rejected the grafts more quickly. Surprisingly, germ-free mice given fecal microbiota transfers from mice that had been treated with antibiotics still rejected the skin grafts slowly, demonstrating distinct effects on graft outcome by these two different communities of microbes. Changing the microbiota also affected the fate of other organ transplants - hearts transplanted into conventional mice pre-treated with antibiotics survived longer as well.
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"In terms of the total number of bacteria that are present, it's the same before and after antibiotics. But instead of 1,000 species, let's say you have just 500 after treatment," Alegre said. "So it's not the bacterial load that makes the difference, it's the composition of the bacterial community."
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"We have evolved to cohabit effectively with our microbes, and they are very beneficial," she said. "We need them. They make vitamins we need. They digest foods we can't digest. They help maintain our health by poising our immune system for fighting infections. So we have to be careful with anything that's going to alter that balance."
Source-Newswise