Neonatal microbiota colonization drives maturation of primary and secondary goblet cell mediated protection in the pre-weaning colon.

Authors

Åsa Johansson, Mahadevan Venkita Subramani, Bahtiyar Yilmaz, Elisabeth Nyström, Elena Layunta, Liisa Arike, Felix Sommer, Philip Rosenstiel, Lars Vereecke, Louise Mannerås Holm, Andy Wullaert, Thaher Pelaseyed, Malin E V Johansson, George M H Birchenough

Year of publication

2024

Journal

bioRxiv

Volume

-

Issue

-

ISSN

2692-8205

Impact factor

-

Abstract

In the distal colon, mucus secreting goblet cells primarily confer protection from luminal microorganisms via generation of a sterile inner mucus layer barrier structure. Bacteria-sensing sentinel goblet cells provide a secondary defensive mechanism that orchestrates mucus secretion in response to microbes that breach the mucus barrier. Previous reports have identified mucus barrier deficiencies in adult germ-free mice, thus implicating a fundamental role for the microbiota in programming mucus barrier generation. In this study, we have investigated the natural neonatal development of the mucus barrier and sentinel goblet cell-dependent secretory responses upon postnatal colonization. Combined in vivo and ex vivo analyses of pre- and post-weaning colonic mucus barrier and sentinel goblet cell maturation demonstrated a sequential microbiota-dependent development of these primary and secondary goblet cell-intrinsic protective functions, with dynamic changes in mucus processing dependent on innate immune signalling via MyD88, and development of functional sentinel goblet cells dependent on the NADPH/Dual oxidase family member Duox2. Our findings therefore identify new mechanisms of microbiota-goblet cell regulatory interaction and highlight the critical importance of the pre-weaning period for the normal development of colonic barrier function.