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Global chemical effects of the microbiome include new bile-acid conjugations

Authors :
Manuela Raffatellu
Julie C. Lumeng
Emily C. Gentry
Pieter C. Dorrestein
Anupriya Tripathi
Barbara I. Kazmierczak
Sarkis K. Mazmanian
Clary B. Clish
Curtis Huttenhower
Marie E. Egan
Ryan D. Welch
Hera Vlamakis
Ronald M. Evans
Ruchi Jain
Morgan Panitchpakdi
Alexis C. Komor
Michael J. Meehan
Michael Downes
Robert Bussell
Andrew T. Nelson
Ting Fu
Taren Thron
Melissa Ann Quinn
Jason Lloyd-Price
William J. Sandborn
Rob Knight
Alexander A. Aksenov
Ramnik J. Xavier
Eric A. Franzosa
Alexey V. Melnik
Dionicio Siegel
Pedro Belda-Ferre
Lawton K. Chung
Zsolt Bodai
Greg Humphrey
Orit Poulsen
Sena Bae
Brigid S. Boland
Kathryn A. Patras
Kyung E. Rhee
Robert A. Quinn
Alison Vrbanac
John T. Chang
Ricardo Silva
Mitchell P. Christy
Gabriel G. Haddad
Fernando Vargas
Julia M. Gauglitz
Victor Nizet
Julian Avila-Pacheco
Timothy D. Arthur
Neha Garg
David P. Ferguson
Himel Mallick
Mingxun Wang
Eric C. Leszczynski
Kelly C. Weldon
Meerana Lim
Source :
Nature, vol 579, iss 7797
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2020.

Abstract

A mosaic of cross-phylum chemical interactions occurs between all metazoans and their microbiomes. A number of molecular families that are known to be produced by the microbiome have a marked effect on the balance between health and disease1–9. Considering the diversity of the human microbiome (which numbers over 40,000 operational taxonomic units10), the effect of the microbiome on the chemistry of an entire animal remains underexplored. Here we use mass spectrometry informatics and data visualization approaches11–13 to provide an assessment of the effects of the microbiome on the chemistry of an entire mammal by comparing metabolomics data from germ-free and specific-pathogen-free mice. We found that the microbiota affects the chemistry of all organs. This included the amino acid conjugations of host bile acids that were used to produce phenylalanocholic acid, tyrosocholic acid and leucocholic acid, which have not previously been characterized despite extensive research on bile-acid chemistry14. These bile-acid conjugates were also found in humans, and were enriched in patients with inflammatory bowel disease or cystic fibrosis. These compounds agonized the farnesoid X receptor in vitro, and mice gavaged with the compounds showed reduced expression of bile-acid synthesis genes in vivo. Further studies are required to confirm whether these compounds have a physiological role in the host, and whether they contribute to gut diseases that are associated with microbiome dysbiosis. Metabolomics data from germ-free and specific-pathogen-free mice reveal effects of the microbiome on host chemistry, identifying conjugations of bile acids that are also enriched in patients with inflammatory bowel disease or cystic fibrosis.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature, vol 579, iss 7797
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8fae32db1daaf4f551051bc534e25f19