2023-2024 / NUTR1003-1

Advances in GIT biology

Duration

15h Th, 5h AUTR

Number of credits

 Master in biomedicine (120 ECTS)2 crédits 

Lecturer

Véronique Delcenserie, Souad Rahmouni, Bernard Taminiau

Language(s) of instruction

English language

Organisation and examination

Teaching in the first semester, review in January

Schedule

Schedule online

Units courses prerequisite and corequisite

Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program

Learning unit contents

Adances in GIT Biology will explore several aspects of digestive tract.

We will first discuss about the different facets of gut immunity including the mucosal barrier, the absorptive surface, immune reactions to foreign antigens, maintenance of tolerance to benign antigens and building appropriate response to pathogenic insults.

The intervention of the immune system in the postnatal development of the small intestine (and other digestive organs) will then be briefly discussed.

The intestinal microbiota plays a fundamental role in the development and proper function of the immune system from birth. The intestinal colonization of the newborn by the mother during delivery and during breastfeeding is essential for the establishment of a favorable intestinal microbiota. But the composition of the gut microbiota can be influenced by many other factors such as antibiotics, stress, diet, environment, infectious agents. The establishment of a balanced microbial population (composition, amount, metabolites produced, interaction with the intestinal epithelium and the intestinal-associated immune system) at the beginning or during the life of an individual is essential. The use of synbiotics, a combination of probiotics and prebiotics (nutrients specific to microbial populations) as specialized microbial regulator supplements, may be of interest for the health of the gut microbiota.

Research on the human microbiota and particularly on the gut microbiota has taken off with the new technologies of molecular biology and bioinformatics. Like microbiology, microbiota analysis is based on indirect techniques focusing on three essential questions: what are the microbial populations present, what are their metabolic potentials and what are the products of their metabolism. The course illustrates the usual and modern techniques for addressing these three issues.

Learning outcomes of the learning unit

At the end of the course, you will be able to:

  • Understand the fundamentals of gut immunology
  • Explain tolerance to food and commensal bacteria
  • Understand the different criteria used to judge the quality of a probiotic or prebiotic.
  • Acquire the capacity to criticize the various studies published in the field of pro- and prebiotics.
  • Criticize the in vitro models used to assess the effect of a probiotic or prebiotic.
  • Understand certain technical and qualitative aspects of microbiota analysis methods.
  • Comprehend the strengths and constraints of each approach to select and employ the most suitable microbiota analysis method for the specific scientific inquiry.
  • Read and criticize scientific publications in the field of digestive system biology.
 

Prerequisite knowledge and skills

Knowledge of fundamental bases in Biology, Immunology, structure and function of the digestive system.

Basic knowledge of genetics, microbiology and parasitology.

Planned learning activities and teaching methods

Lectures

Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)

Face-to-face course


Additional information:

In person

Recommended or required readings

Veldhoen & Brucklacher-Waldert. Dietary influences on intestinal immunity, Nature Reviews, 12, 696-708. doi:10.1038/nri3299

Round & Mazmanian. The gut microbiota shapes intestinal immune responses during health and disease. Nature Reviews, 9, 313-323. doi:10.1038/nri2515

Mowat. To respond or not to respond - a personnal perspective of intestinal tolerance. Nature Reviews. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41577-018-0002-x

Zhou, J. et al. High-Throughput Metagenomic Technologies for Complex Microbial Community Analysis: Open and Closed Formats. mBio 6, e02288-14 (2015)
 
Lau, J. T. et al. Capturing the diversity of the human gut microbiota through culture-enriched molecular profiling. Genome Medicine 8, 1635 (2016).
 
Wooley, J. C., Godzik, A. & Friedberg, I. A primer on metagenomics. PLoS Comput Biol 6, e1000667 (2010).
 
Fondi, M. & Pietro Liò. Multi -omics and metabolic modelling pipelines: Challenges and tools for systems microbiology. Microbiological Research 171, 52-64 (2015).

Exam(s) in session

Any session

- In-person

written exam ( multiple-choice questionnaire, open-ended questions )


Additional information:

Any session :

- In-person or remote

written exam ( multiple-choice questionnaire, open-ended questions ) 

- If evaluation in "hybrid"

preferred remote 


Additional information:

Written exam + group work

The exam grade is weighted as follows:

80% on the written exam on the day of the exam

20% on the group work 

The overall grade for this course is indivisible. Group work counts for part of the grade, but will never be waived if the course is failed at the end of the year.

Work placement(s)

Organisational remarks and main changes to the course

Contacts

srahmouni@uliege.be  - +32 4 3662830

veronique.delcenserie@uliege.be +32 4 3665124

bernard.taminiau@uliege.be - +32 4 3664226

Association of one or more MOOCs