A preliminary study examining the binding capacity of akkermansia muciniphila and desulfovibrio spp., to colonic mucin in health and ulcerative colitis
posted on 2016-03-30, 14:08authored byHelen Earley, Grainne Lennon, Áine Balfe, Michelle Kilcoyne, Marguerite Clyne, Lokesh Joshi, Stephen Carrington, Sean T. Martin, Calvin J. Coffey, Desmond C. Winter, Ronan P. O'Connell
Akkermansia muciniphila and Desulfovibrio spp. are commensal microbes colonising the
mucus gel layer of the colon. Both species have the capacity to utilise colonic mucin as a
substrate. A. muciniphila degrades colonic mucin, while Desulfovibrio spp. metabolise the
sulfate moiety of sulfated mucins. Altered abundances of these microorganisms have been
reported in ulcerative colitis (UC). However their capacity to bind to human colonic mucin,
and whether this binding capacity is affected by changes in mucin associated with UC,
remain to be defined.