Immune responses and parasitological observations induced during probiotic treatment with medicinal Trichuris suis ova in a healthy volunteer

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Immune responses and parasitological observations induced during probiotic treatment with medicinal Trichuris suis ova in a healthy volunteer. / Williams, Andrew R.; Dige, Anders; Rasmussen, Tue Kruse; Hvas, Christian Lodberg; Dahlerup, Jens Frederik; Iversen, Lars; Stensvold, C Rune; Agnholt, Jørgen; Nejsum, Peter.

In: Immunology Letters, Vol. 188, 01.08.2017, p. 32-37.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Williams, AR, Dige, A, Rasmussen, TK, Hvas, CL, Dahlerup, JF, Iversen, L, Stensvold, CR, Agnholt, J & Nejsum, P 2017, 'Immune responses and parasitological observations induced during probiotic treatment with medicinal Trichuris suis ova in a healthy volunteer', Immunology Letters, vol. 188, pp. 32-37. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.imlet.2017.06.002

APA

Williams, A. R., Dige, A., Rasmussen, T. K., Hvas, C. L., Dahlerup, J. F., Iversen, L., Stensvold, C. R., Agnholt, J., & Nejsum, P. (2017). Immune responses and parasitological observations induced during probiotic treatment with medicinal Trichuris suis ova in a healthy volunteer. Immunology Letters, 188, 32-37. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.imlet.2017.06.002

Vancouver

Williams AR, Dige A, Rasmussen TK, Hvas CL, Dahlerup JF, Iversen L et al. Immune responses and parasitological observations induced during probiotic treatment with medicinal Trichuris suis ova in a healthy volunteer. Immunology Letters. 2017 Aug 1;188:32-37. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.imlet.2017.06.002

Author

Williams, Andrew R. ; Dige, Anders ; Rasmussen, Tue Kruse ; Hvas, Christian Lodberg ; Dahlerup, Jens Frederik ; Iversen, Lars ; Stensvold, C Rune ; Agnholt, Jørgen ; Nejsum, Peter. / Immune responses and parasitological observations induced during probiotic treatment with medicinal Trichuris suis ova in a healthy volunteer. In: Immunology Letters. 2017 ; Vol. 188. pp. 32-37.

Bibtex

@article{36aaf950cd6847a6a1367faff874dd40,
title = "Immune responses and parasitological observations induced during probiotic treatment with medicinal Trichuris suis ova in a healthy volunteer",
abstract = "Ingestion of eggs (ova) of the porcine nematode parasite Trichuris suis (TSO) may reduce the severity of autoimmune disorders, however the development of TSO treatment as a useful therapy for autoimmune diseases is hampered by a lack of knowledge on the development of the parasite and the nature of the local immune responses in humans. Here, we used colonoscopy to investigate the development of T. suis and related mucosal and systemic immune responses during TSO treatment in an intestinally healthy male volunteer. TSO treatment induced T. suis-specific serum antibodies, a transient blood eosinophilia, and increases in IFNγ+ and IL4+ cells within the circulating CD4+ T-cell population. Increased expression of genes encoding cytokines (IL4, IL10, IL17 and TGF-β), and transcription factors (FOXP3, GATA3 and RORC) were apparent in the ascending and transverse colon (the predilection site of the worms), whereas only limited changes in gene expression were observed proximally (ileum) and distally (descending colon) to the infected tissue. We further show that T. suis is able to colonise the human colon, with a number of worms developing to a similar size and morphology observed in the natural pig host, and a small number of unembryonated eggs were passed in the faeces, indicating patent infection. Notably, the volunteer experienced a substantial improvement in psoriasis during the course of TSO treatment. Thus, TSO treatment induced a mixed Th1/Th2/T regulatory response at the local site of infection, which was also reflected to some extent in the peripheral circulation. These results, together with the first definitive observations that T. suis can mature to adult size and reproduce in humans, shed new light on the interaction between the human immune system and probiotic helminth treatment, which should facilitate further development of this novel therapeutic option.",
keywords = "Helminth therapy, Inflammation, Parasite, Trichuris suis",
author = "Williams, {Andrew R.} and Anders Dige and Rasmussen, {Tue Kruse} and Hvas, {Christian Lodberg} and Dahlerup, {Jens Frederik} and Lars Iversen and Stensvold, {C Rune} and J{\o}rgen Agnholt and Peter Nejsum",
year = "2017",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.imlet.2017.06.002",
language = "English",
volume = "188",
pages = "32--37",
journal = "Immunology Letters",
issn = "0165-2478",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Immune responses and parasitological observations induced during probiotic treatment with medicinal Trichuris suis ova in a healthy volunteer

AU - Williams, Andrew R.

AU - Dige, Anders

AU - Rasmussen, Tue Kruse

AU - Hvas, Christian Lodberg

AU - Dahlerup, Jens Frederik

AU - Iversen, Lars

AU - Stensvold, C Rune

AU - Agnholt, Jørgen

AU - Nejsum, Peter

PY - 2017/8/1

Y1 - 2017/8/1

N2 - Ingestion of eggs (ova) of the porcine nematode parasite Trichuris suis (TSO) may reduce the severity of autoimmune disorders, however the development of TSO treatment as a useful therapy for autoimmune diseases is hampered by a lack of knowledge on the development of the parasite and the nature of the local immune responses in humans. Here, we used colonoscopy to investigate the development of T. suis and related mucosal and systemic immune responses during TSO treatment in an intestinally healthy male volunteer. TSO treatment induced T. suis-specific serum antibodies, a transient blood eosinophilia, and increases in IFNγ+ and IL4+ cells within the circulating CD4+ T-cell population. Increased expression of genes encoding cytokines (IL4, IL10, IL17 and TGF-β), and transcription factors (FOXP3, GATA3 and RORC) were apparent in the ascending and transverse colon (the predilection site of the worms), whereas only limited changes in gene expression were observed proximally (ileum) and distally (descending colon) to the infected tissue. We further show that T. suis is able to colonise the human colon, with a number of worms developing to a similar size and morphology observed in the natural pig host, and a small number of unembryonated eggs were passed in the faeces, indicating patent infection. Notably, the volunteer experienced a substantial improvement in psoriasis during the course of TSO treatment. Thus, TSO treatment induced a mixed Th1/Th2/T regulatory response at the local site of infection, which was also reflected to some extent in the peripheral circulation. These results, together with the first definitive observations that T. suis can mature to adult size and reproduce in humans, shed new light on the interaction between the human immune system and probiotic helminth treatment, which should facilitate further development of this novel therapeutic option.

AB - Ingestion of eggs (ova) of the porcine nematode parasite Trichuris suis (TSO) may reduce the severity of autoimmune disorders, however the development of TSO treatment as a useful therapy for autoimmune diseases is hampered by a lack of knowledge on the development of the parasite and the nature of the local immune responses in humans. Here, we used colonoscopy to investigate the development of T. suis and related mucosal and systemic immune responses during TSO treatment in an intestinally healthy male volunteer. TSO treatment induced T. suis-specific serum antibodies, a transient blood eosinophilia, and increases in IFNγ+ and IL4+ cells within the circulating CD4+ T-cell population. Increased expression of genes encoding cytokines (IL4, IL10, IL17 and TGF-β), and transcription factors (FOXP3, GATA3 and RORC) were apparent in the ascending and transverse colon (the predilection site of the worms), whereas only limited changes in gene expression were observed proximally (ileum) and distally (descending colon) to the infected tissue. We further show that T. suis is able to colonise the human colon, with a number of worms developing to a similar size and morphology observed in the natural pig host, and a small number of unembryonated eggs were passed in the faeces, indicating patent infection. Notably, the volunteer experienced a substantial improvement in psoriasis during the course of TSO treatment. Thus, TSO treatment induced a mixed Th1/Th2/T regulatory response at the local site of infection, which was also reflected to some extent in the peripheral circulation. These results, together with the first definitive observations that T. suis can mature to adult size and reproduce in humans, shed new light on the interaction between the human immune system and probiotic helminth treatment, which should facilitate further development of this novel therapeutic option.

KW - Helminth therapy

KW - Inflammation

KW - Parasite

KW - Trichuris suis

U2 - 10.1016/j.imlet.2017.06.002

DO - 10.1016/j.imlet.2017.06.002

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28602842

AN - SCOPUS:85020432600

VL - 188

SP - 32

EP - 37

JO - Immunology Letters

JF - Immunology Letters

SN - 0165-2478

ER -

ID: 179667539