The gut microbiota is closely linked with many gastrointestinal disorders, including inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), diabetes, and colorectal cancer. However, many of the molecular mechanisms by which gut microorganisms and their metabolic products perturb host immunity are not yet understood. Both live cell and microbially-derived small molecule interventions have proven to prevent or ameliorate GI inflammation, but to a large degree, the therapeutic potential of targeted components of the microbiome has not yet been realized. In response to RFA-DK-15-012, we thus propose a ?community research resource of identified members of the microbiome and factors they elaborate which modulate human physiology or pathophysiology related to... digestive diseases.? The Human Microbial Bioactives Resource (HMBR) will provide a comprehensive platform for discovery, validation, and early-stage translation of novel therapeutics derived from the microbiome: 1. An efficient end-to-end sampling and multi?omic profiling system for the host and microbiota in gastrointestinal disease. 2. Data from thousands of IBD microbiomes and tens of thousands of gut microbiome profiles, spanning dozens of datasets and meta-analyzing multiple countries, cohorts, and clinical centers. 3. Prioritized potentially bioactive elements of the gut microbiome in IBD, including A) microbial species and strains, B) microbial gene products (proteins, secreted peptides, biosynthetic gene clusters, etc.), and C) small molecules (e.g. metabolites or signaling molecules). 4. Screens for high-priority bioactives in vitro using mammalian cell and tissue models to characterize potential mechanisms of action and identify host-microbe-metabolite interactions. 5. Phenotypic readouts (cell population, cellular function-based, and preclinical IBD models) for successful bioactives in conventional and gnotobiotic mice to assess activity in vivo. 6. All HMBR data, protocols, computational tools, microbial isolates, compounds, cell lines, mice, screening results, and training material provided to the community through a unified web-based portal. 7. Exercising the resource with a driving biological application by verifying and characterizing novel modulators of the IL-10 anti-inflammatory and TNF? pro-inflammatory responses. This resource will be developed in the context of the Broad Institute, a leader in gut microbiome profiling and analysis in IBD; the Harvard School of Public Health, home to a rigorously monitored gnotobiotic mouse facility; and the University of Maryland, which currently supports the largest human microbiome resource worldwide in the form of the Human Microbiome Project 1 and 2 Data Coordinating Centers. Through this combination of investigators, environments, resources, and biological applications, we will establish and provide to the community the first platform of its kind for end-to-end microbiome therapeutic discovery and validation.

Public Health Relevance

Microbes associated with the human body, particularly in the gastrointestinal tract, profoundly influence the immune system and human health, but the molecules that carry out these activities are not yet well- understood. Identifying them will greatly accelerate the development of new drugs and treatments for conditions ranging from inflammatory bowel disease to colorectal cancer. In this study, we will provide resources that enable the entire scientific community to study these molecular mechanisms and microbial products in gastrointestinal disease, producing new potential targets for drug development and clinical intervention.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
Type
Resource-Related Research Projects (R24)
Project #
5R24DK110499-02
Application #
9567163
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDK1)
Program Officer
Karp, Robert W
Project Start
2017-09-20
Project End
2022-06-30
Budget Start
2018-07-01
Budget End
2019-06-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Broad Institute, Inc.
Department
Type
DUNS #
623544785
City
Cambridge
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
Vatanen, Tommi; Franzosa, Eric A; Schwager, Randall et al. (2018) The human gut microbiome in early-onset type 1 diabetes from the TEDDY study. Nature 562:589-594