Authors
Frank Yeung, Ying-Han Chen, Jian-Da Lin, Jacqueline M Leung, Caroline McCauley, Joseph C Devlin, Christina Hansen, Alex Cronkite, Zac Stephens, Charlotte Drake-Dunn, Yi Fulmer, Bo Shopsin, Kelly V Ruggles, June L Round, Andrea L Graham, Ken Cadwell
Publication date
2020/5/13
Journal
Cell host & microbe
Volume
27
Issue
5
Pages
809-822. e6
Publisher
Cell Press
Description
Free-living mammals, such as humans and wild mice, display heightened immune activation compared with artificially maintained laboratory mice. These differences are partially attributed to microbial exposure as laboratory mice infected with pathogens exhibit immune profiles more closely resembling that of free-living animals. Here, we examine how colonization by microorganisms within the natural environment contributes to immune system maturation by releasing inbred laboratory mice into an outdoor enclosure. In addition to enhancing differentiation of T cell populations previously associated with pathogen exposure, outdoor release increased circulating granulocytes. However, these "rewilded" mice were not infected by pathogens previously implicated in immune activation. Rather, immune system changes were associated with altered microbiota composition with notable increases in intestinal fungi. Fungi …
Total citations
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