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Deciphering the impact of exposures from the gut microbiome-derived molecular complex in human health and disease

Project description

Gut microbiome molecular complex in human health and disease

The human gut microbiome is a complex ecosystem with essential contributions to human physiology. Microbiome changes are implicated in several chronic diseases characterised by inflammation, including neurodegenerative and autoimmune diseases. Microbiome-derived molecules including nucleic acids, polypeptides and metabolites have not been studied systematically. The EU-funded ExpoBiome project aims to integrate high-resolution methodologies to study these molecular complexes and their impact on the human immune system in the context of health and disease. By facilitating the elucidation of currently unknown microbiome-derived molecules, the project will identify new genes, proteins, metabolites and essential pathways for the development of potential diagnostics and therapeutic applications.

Objective

The human gut microbiome is a complex ecosystem, which contributes essential functions to human physiology. Changes to the microbiome are associated with several chronic diseases characterised by inflammation, including neurodegenerative and autoimmune diseases. Microbiome-derived effector molecules comprising nucleic acids, (poly)peptides and metabolites are present at high levels in the gut but have so far eluded systematic study. This gap in knowledge is limiting mechanistic understanding of the microbiome’s functional impact on chronic diseases such as Parkinson’s disease (PD) and rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Here, I will for the first time integrate a combination of advanced high-resolution methodologies to comprehensively identify the constituents of this molecular complex and their impact on the human immune system. First, I will perform a quantitative, integrated multi-omic analysis on microbiome samples collected from healthy individuals and patients with newly diagnosed PD or RA. I will integrate and analyse the data using a newly developed knowledge base. Using contextualised prior knowledge (ExpoBiome Map) and machine learning methods, I will identify microbial molecules associated with condition-specific immunophenotypes. Second, I will validate and track the biomarker signature during a model clinical intervention (therapeutic fasting) to predict treatment outcomes. Third, microbes and molecules will be screened in personalised HuMiX gut-on-chip models to identify novel anti-inflammatory compounds. By providing mechanistic insights into the molecular basis of human-microbiome interactions, the project will generate essential new knowledge about causal relationships between the gut microbiome and the immune system in health and disease. By facilitating the elucidation of currently unknown microbiome-derived molecules, it will identify new genes, proteins, metabolites and host pathways for the development of future diagnostic and therapeutic applications.

Host institution

UNIVERSITE DU LUXEMBOURG
Net EU contribution
€ 1 998 620,00
Address
2 PLACE DE L'UNIVERSITE
4365 ESCH-SUR-ALZETTE
Luxembourg

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Region
Luxembourg Luxembourg Luxembourg
Activity type
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
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Total cost
€ 1 998 620,00

Beneficiaries (1)