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NOD2-mediated dysbiosis predisposes mice to transmissible colitis and colorectal cancer

Aurélie Couturier-Maillard, Thomas Sécher, Ateequr Rehman, Sylvain Normand, Adèle De Arcangelis, Robert Haesler, Ludovic Huot, Teddy Grandjean, Aude Bressenot, Anne Delanoye-Crespin, Olivier Gaillot, Stefan Schreiber, Yves Lemoine, Bernhard Ryffel, David Hot

Journal of Clinical Investigation · 2013 · ▲ 574 citations

Abstract

Instability in the composition of gut bacterial communities (dysbiosis) has been linked to common human intestinal disorders, such as Crohn's disease and colorectal cancer. Here, we show that dysbiosis caused by Nod2 deficiency gives rise to a reversible, communicable risk of colitis and colitis-associated carcinogenesis in mice. Loss of either Nod2 or RIP2 resulted in a proinflammatory microenvironment that enhanced epithelial dysplasia following chemically induced injury. The condition could be improved by treatment with antibiotics or an anti-interleukin-6 receptor-neutralizing antibody. Genotype-dependent disease risk was communicable via maternally transmitted microbiota in both Nod2-deficient and WT hosts. Furthermore, reciprocal microbiota transplantation reduced disease risk in Nod2-deficient mice and led to long-term changes in intestinal microbial communities. Conversely, disease risk was enhanced in WT hosts that were recolonized with dysbiotic fecal microbiota from Nod2-deficient mice. Thus, we demonstrated that licensing of dysbiotic microbiota is a critical component of disease risk. Our results demonstrate that NOD2 has an unexpected role in shaping a protective assembly of gut bacterial communities and suggest that manipulation of dysbiosis is a potential therapeutic approach in the treatment of human intestinal disorders.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1172/jci62236
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2026-06-13 MST

Cite this

APA
Couturier-Maillard, A., Sécher, T., Rehman, A., Normand, S., Arcangelis, A.D., Haesler, R., Huot, L., Grandjean, T., Bressenot, A., Delanoye-Crespin, A., Gaillot, O., Schreiber, S., Lemoine, Y., Ryffel, B., Hot, D., Núñez, G., Chen, G., Rosenstiel, P., &amp; Chamaillard, M. (2013). NOD2-mediated dysbiosis predisposes mice to transmissible colitis and colorectal cancer. <em>Journal of Clinical Investigation</em>. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci62236
Vancouver
Couturier-Maillard A, Sécher T, Rehman A, Normand S, Arcangelis AD, Haesler R, et al. NOD2-mediated dysbiosis predisposes mice to transmissible colitis and colorectal cancer. Journal of Clinical Investigation. 2013. doi:10.1172/jci62236.
BibTeX
@article{aurlie2013NODmed, title = {NOD2-mediated dysbiosis predisposes mice to transmissible colitis and colorectal cancer}, author = {Aurélie Couturier-Maillard and Thomas Sécher and Ateequr Rehman and Sylvain Normand and Adèle De Arcangelis and Robert Haesler and Ludovic Huot and Teddy Grandjean and Aude Bressenot and Anne Delanoye-Crespin and Olivier Gaillot and Stefan Schreiber and Yves Lemoine and Bernhard Ryffel and David Hot and Gabriel Núñez and Grace Chen and Philip Rosenstiel and Mathias Chamaillard}, journal = {Journal of Clinical Investigation}, year = {2013}, doi = {10.1172/jci62236}, }

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