Excess dietary sugar impairs colonic epithelial regeneration in response to damage.

2021 
The colonic epithelium requires continuous renewal by intestinal stem cells (ISCs) to restore the barrier after damage and proliferation of epithelial cells is modulated by dietary metabolites. We demonstrate that mice fed a high sugar diet failed to repair colonic barrier damage, resulting in increased intestinal pathology. Culturing ISCs in excess sugar limited murine and human colonoid development, indicating that dietary sugar can directly affect colonic epithelial proliferation. Similarly, in vivo lineage tracing experiments and transcriptomic analysis indicated that dietary sugar impeded the proliferative potential of ISCs. ISCs and their immediate daughter cells predominantly rely on mitochondrial respiration for energy; however, metabolic analysis of colonic crypts revealed that a high sugar diet primed the epithelium for glycolysis without a commensurate increase in aerobic respiration. Colonoids cultured in high-glucose conditions accumulated glycolytic metabolites but not TCA cycle intermediates, indicating that the two metabolic pathways may not be coupled in proliferating intestinal epithelium. Accordingly, biochemically inducing pyruvate flux through the TCA cycle by inhibiting pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase rescued sugar-impaired colonoid development. Our results indicate that excess dietary sugar can directly inhibit epithelial proliferation in response to damage and may inform diets that better support the treatment of acute intestinal injury.
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