Marcus Rauch
University of California, San Francisco
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marcus Rauch.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Kei E. Fujimura; Tine Demoor; Marcus Rauch; Ali A. Faruqi; Sihyug Jang; Christine Cole Johnson; Homer A. Boushey; Edward M. Zoratti; Dennis R. Ownby; Nicholas W. Lukacs; Susan V. Lynch
Significance Early-life exposure to dogs is protective against allergic disease development, and dog ownership is associated with a distinct milieu of house dust microbial exposures. Here, we show that mice exposed to dog-associated house dust are protected against airway allergen challenge. These animals exhibit reduced Th2 cytokine production, fewer activated T cells, and a distinct gut microbiome composition, highly enriched for Lactobacillus johnsonii, which itself can confer airway protection when orally supplemented as a single species. This study supports the possibility that host–environment interactions that govern allergic or infectious airway disease may be mediated, at least in part, by the impact of environmental exposures on the gastrointestinal microbiome composition and, by extension, its impact on the host immune response. Exposure to dogs in early infancy has been shown to reduce the risk of childhood allergic disease development, and dog ownership is associated with a distinct house dust microbial exposure. Here, we demonstrate, using murine models, that exposure of mice to dog-associated house dust protects against ovalbumin or cockroach allergen-mediated airway pathology. Protected animals exhibited significant reduction in the total number of airway T cells, down-regulation of Th2-related airway responses, as well as mucin secretion. Following dog-associated dust exposure, the cecal microbiome of protected animals was extensively restructured with significant enrichment of, amongst others, Lactobacillus johnsonii. Supplementation of wild-type animals with L. johnsonii protected them against both airway allergen challenge or infection with respiratory syncytial virus. L. johnsonii-mediated protection was associated with significant reductions in the total number and proportion of activated CD11c+/CD11b+ and CD11c+/CD8+ cells, as well as significantly reduced airway Th2 cytokine expression. Our results reveal that exposure to dog-associated household dust results in protection against airway allergen challenge and a distinct gastrointestinal microbiome composition. Moreover, the study identifies L. johnsonii as a pivotal species within the gastrointestinal tract capable of influencing adaptive immunity at remote mucosal surfaces in a manner that is protective against a variety of respiratory insults.
Science Translational Medicine | 2014
Amir Ardeshir; Nicole R. Narayan; Gema Méndez-Lagares; Ding Lu; Marcus Rauch; Yong Huang; Koen K. A. Van Rompay; Susan V. Lynch; Dennis Hartigan-O'Connor
Breast-feeding and bottle-feeding promote different gut microbial communities, which are associated with development of different immune systems in rhesus macaque infants. Diet and the Infant Gut Microbiota Diet has a strong influence on the microbes living in the intestine. Furthermore, microbial colonization of the gut is required for normal development of the immune system. Nonetheless, it has been unclear how profoundly diet might shape the primate immune system or how durable the influence might be. Ardeshir et al. now demonstrate that breast-fed and bottle-fed infant macaques develop markedly different immune systems, which remain different for at least 6 months after the animals begin receiving identical diets. These findings may partly explain the variation in human susceptibility to conditions with an immune basis, as well as the variable protection against certain infectious diseases. Diet has a strong influence on the intestinal microbiota in both humans and animal models. It is well established that microbial colonization is required for normal development of the immune system and that specific microbial constituents prompt the differentiation or expansion of certain immune cell subsets. Nonetheless, it has been unclear how profoundly diet might shape the primate immune system or how durable the influence might be. We show that breast-fed and bottle-fed infant rhesus macaques develop markedly different immune systems, which remain different 6 months after weaning when the animals begin receiving identical diets. In particular, breast-fed infants develop robust populations of memory T cells as well as T helper 17 (TH17) cells within the memory pool, whereas bottle-fed infants do not. These findings may partly explain the variation in human susceptibility to conditions with an immune basis, as well as the variable protection against certain infectious diseases.
Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2012
Marcus Rauch; Susan V. Lynch
Multiple internal and external sites of the healthy human body are colonized by a diversity of symbiotic microbes. The microbial assemblages found in the intestine represent some of the most dense and diverse of these human-associated ecosystems. Unsurprisingly, the enteric microbiome, that is the totality of microbes, their combined genomes, and their interactions with the human body, has a profound impact on physiological aspects of mammalian function, not least, host immune response. Lack of early-life exposure to certain microbes, or shifts in the composition of the gastrointestinal microbiome have been linked to the development and progression of several intestinal and extra-intestinal diseases, including childhood asthma development and inflammatory bowel disease. Modulating microbial exposure through probiotic supplementation represents a long-held strategy towards ameliorating disease via intestinal microbial community restructuring. This field has experienced somewhat of a resurgence over the past few years, primarily due to the exponential increase in human microbiome studies and a growing appreciation of our dependence on resident microbiota to modulate human health. This review aims to review recent regulatory aspects related to probiotics in food. It also summarizes what is known to date with respect to human gastrointestinal microbiota - the niche which has been most extensively studied in the human system - and the evidence for probiotic supplementation as a viable therapeutic strategy for modulating this consortium.
Gut microbes | 2010
Marcus Rauch; Susan V. Lynch
In a recent publication we examined whether high abundance of a probiotic species, Lactobacillus casei subsp. rhamnosus GG(LGG), impacted the overall composition of the gastrointestinal (GI) microbiota of 6 month-old infants at high risk for asthma development. Profound GI microbiota restructuring and the establishment of significantly more even and putatively, functionally redundant consortia were characteristic of high LGG abundance. Here we discuss, in the context of more recently published data, support for the hypothesis that the beneficial effect of probiotic supplementation on human health lies in the formation of a stable and resilient gut ecosystem enriched for species that exert a concerted beneficial effect on the host immune system via direct and indirect mechanisms.
Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2012
Kei E. Fujimura; Marcus Rauch; Elizabeth C. Matsui; Shoko Iwai; Agustin Calatroni; Henry Lynn; Herman Mitchell; Christine Cole Johnson; James E. Gern; Alkis Togias; Homer A. Boushey; Suzanne Kennedy; Susan V. Lynch
Standardized studies examining environmental microbial exposure in populations at risk for asthma are necessary to improve our understanding of the role this factor plays in disease development. Here we describe studies aimed at developing guidelines for high-resolution culture-independent microbiome profiling, using a phylogenetic microarray (PhyloChip), of house dust samples in a cohort collected as part of the NIH-funded Inner City Asthma Consortium (ICAC). We demonstrate that though extracted DNA concentrations varied across dust samples, the majority produced sufficient 16S rRNA to be profiled by the array. Comparison of array and 454-pyrosequencing performed in parallel on a subset of samples, illustrated that increasingly deeper sequencing efforts validated greater numbers of array-detected taxa. Community composition agreement across samples exhibited a hierarchy in concordance, with the highest level of agreement in replicate array profiles followed by samples collected from adjacent 1×1 m(2) sites in the same room, adjacent sites with different sized sampling quadrants (1×1 and 2×2 m(2)), different sites within homes (living and bedroom) to lowest in living room samples collected from different homes. The guidelines for sample collection and processing in this pilot study extend beyond PhyloChip based studies of house-associated microbiota, and bear relevance for other microbiome profiling approaches such as next-generation sequencing.
Nature Communications | 2018
Juliana Durack; Nikole E. Kimes; Din L. Lin; Marcus Rauch; Michelle McKean; Kathryn McCauley; Ariane R. Panzer; Jordan S. Mar; Michael D. Cabana; Susan V. Lynch
Gut microbiota dysbiosis and metabolic dysfunction in infancy precedes childhood atopy and asthma development. Here we examined gut microbiota maturation over the first year of life in infants at high risk for asthma (HR), and whether it is modifiable by early-life Lactobacillus supplementation. We performed a longitudinal comparison of stool samples collected from HR infants randomized to daily oral Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (HRLGG) or placebo (HRP) for 6 months, and healthy (HC) infants. Meconium microbiota of HRP participants is distinct, follows a delayed developmental trajectory, and is primarily glycolytic and depleted of a range of anti-inflammatory lipids at 6 months of age. These deficits are partly rescued in HRLGG infants, but this effect was lost at 12 months of age, 6 months after cessation of supplementation. Thus we show that early-life gut microbial development is distinct, but plastic, in HR infants. Our findings offer a novel strategy for early-life preventative interventions.Gut microbial dysbiosis in infancy is associated with childhood atopy and the development of asthma. Here, the authors show that gut microbiota perturbation is evident in the very earliest stages of postnatal life, continues throughout infancy, and can be partially rescued by Lactobacillus supplementation in high-risk for asthma infants.
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2017
Juliana Durack; Nikole E. Kimes; Din L. Lin; Michelle McKean; Marcus Rauch; Michael D. Cabana; Susan V. Lynch
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2014
Jeremy Wildfire; Agustin Calatroni; Susan V. Lynch; Homer A. Boushey; Kei E. Fujimura; Marcus Rauch; Henry Lynn
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2014
Kaitlyn S. Lucey; Kei E. Fujimura; Marcus Rauch; Ali A. Faruqi; Douglas Fadrosh; Tine Demoor; Homer A. Boushey; Edward M. Zoratti; Dennis R. Ownby; Nicholas W. Lukacs; Susan V. Lynch
/data/revues/00916749/unassign/S0091674914005934/ | 2014
Susan V. Lynch; Robert A. Wood; Homer A. Boushey; Leonard B. Bacharier; Gordon R. Bloomberg; Meyer Kattan; George T. O’Connor; Megan Sandel; Agustin Calatroni; Elizabeth C. Matsui; Christine Cole Johnson; Henry Lynn; Cynthia M. Visness; Katy F. Jaffee; Peter J. Gergen; Diane R. Gold; Rosalind J. Wright; Kei E. Fujimura; Marcus Rauch; William W. Busse; James E. Gern