Dietary conjugated linoleic acid links reduced intestinal inflammation to amelioration of CNS autoimmunity

Fleck AK, Hucke S, Teipel F, Eschborn M, Janoschka C, Liebmann M, Wami H, Korn L, Pickert G, Hartwig M, Wirth T, Herold M, Koch K, Falk-Paulsen M, Dobrindt U, Kovac S, Gross CC, Rosenstiel P, Trautmann M, Wiendl H, Schuppan D, Kuhlmann T, Klotz L

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Abstract A close interaction between gut immune responses and distant organ-specific autoimmunity including the CNS in multiple sclerosis has been established in recent years. This so-called gut-CNS axis can be shaped by dietary factors, either directly or via indirect modulation of the gut microbiome and its metabolites. Here, we report that dietary supplementation with conjugated linoleic acid, a mixture of linoleic acid isomers, ameliorates CNS autoimmunity in a spontaneous mouse model of multiple sclerosis, accompanied by an attenuation of intestinal barrier dysfunction and inflammation as well as an increase in intestinal myeloid-derived suppressor-like cells. Protective effects of dietary supplementation with conjugated linoleic acid were not abrogated upon microbiota eradication, indicating that the microbiome is dispensable for these conjugated linoleic acid-mediated effects. Instead, we observed a range of direct anti-inflammatory effects of conjugated linoleic acid on murine myeloid cells including an enhanced IL10 production and the capacity to suppress T-cell proliferation. Finally, in a human pilot study in patients with multiple sclerosis (n = 15, under first-line disease-modifying treatment), dietary conjugated linoleic acid-supplementation for 6 months significantly enhanced the anti-inflammatory profiles as well as functional signatures of circulating myeloid cells. Together, our results identify conjugated linoleic acid as a potent modulator of the gut-CNS axis by targeting myeloid cells in the intestine, which in turn control encephalitogenic T-cell responses.

Details about the publication

JournalBrain
Volume144
Issue4
Page range1152-1166
StatusPublished
Release year2021 (07/05/2021)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1093/brain/awab040
Keywordsconjugated linoleic acid; dietary supplementation; gut–CNS axis; intestinal inflammation; multiple sclerosis

Authors from the University of Münster

Dobrindt, Ulrich
Institute of Hygiene
Eschborn, Melanie
Department for Neurology
Fleck, Ann-Katrin
Department for Neurology
Groß, Catharina
Department for Neurology
Hartwig, Marvin
Department for Neurology
Herold, Martin
Department for Neurology
Janoschka, Claudia
Department for Neurology
Klotz, Luisa Hildegard
Department for Neurology
Koch, Kathrin
Department for Neurology
Kovac, Stjepana
Department for Neurology
Kuhlmann, Tanja
Institute of Neuropathology
Liebmann, Marie
Department for Neurology
Trautmann, Marcel
Gerhard Domagk Institute of Pathology
Wami, Haleluya Tesfaye
Institute of Hygiene
Wiendl, Heinz Siegfried
Department for Neurology
Wirth, Timo
Department for Neurology