| Literature DB >> 30619171 |
Daniel N Villageliú1,2, David J Borts3, Mark Lyte1.
Abstract
Utilizing a simulated gastrointestinal medium which approximates physiological conditions within the mammalian GI tract, experiments aimed at isolating and identifying unique microbial metabolites were conducted. These efforts led to the finding that Escherichia coli, a common member of the gut microbiota, is capable of producing significant quantities of salsolinol. Salsolinol is a neuroactive compound which has been investigated as a potential contributor to the development of neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson's disease (PD). However the origin of salsolinol within the body has remained highly contested. We herein report the first demonstration that salsolinol can be made in vitro in response to microbial activity. We detail the isolation and identification of salsolinol produced by E. coli, which is capable of producing salsolinol in the presence of dopamine with production enhanced in the presence of alcohol. That this discovery was found in a medium that approximates gut conditions suggests that microbial salsolinol production could exist in the gut. This discovery lays the ground work for follow up in vivo investigations to explore whether salsolinol production is a mechanism by which the microbiota may influence the host. As salsolinol has been implicated in the pathogenesis of PD, this work may be relevant, for example, to investigators who have suggested that the development of PD may have a gut origin. This report suggests, but does not establish, an alternative microbiota-based mechanism to explain how the gut may play a critical role in the development of PD as well other conditions involving altered neuronal function due to salsolinol-induced neurotoxicity.Entities:
Keywords: Parkinson’s disease; gut origin for Parkinson’s disease; gut-brain-axis communication; microbial metabolic activity; salsolinol
Year: 2018 PMID: 30619171 PMCID: PMC6305307 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.03092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FIGURE 1Response of E. coli to dopamine analyzed by UHPLC-ECD. (Left) Control (non-inoculated) simulated small intestinal medium supplemented with 1 mM dopamine. (Right) Dopamine supplemented medium with organisms grown within generates a distinct chromatographic signal indicative of the production of a new chemical. This effect is not observed when E. coli is grown in the absence of dopamine.
FIGURE 2Reversed phase chromatography positive ion electrospray extracted ion chromatograms and product ion spectra. (A) Extracted ion chromatogram for the m/z 180 ion in the isolated fraction. (B) Extracted ion chromatogram for the m/z 180 ion from the salsolinol analytical standard. (C) Product ion spectrum (CE setting = 20) for the m/z 180 ion in the isolated fraction. (D) Product ion spectrum (CE setting = 20) for the m/z 180 ion in the salsolinol analytical standard.
FIGURE 3Hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (HILIC) positive ion electrospray extracted ion chromatograms and product ion spectra. (A) Extracted ion chromatogram for the m/z 180 ion in the isolated fraction. (B) Extracted ion chromatogram for the m/z 180 ion from the salsolinol analytical standard. (C) Product ion spectrum (CE setting = 20) for the m/z 180 ion in the isolated fraction. (D) Product ion spectrum (CE setting = 20) for the m/z 180 ion in the salsolinol analytical standard.
FIGURE 4The formation of salsolinol by several species of Enterobacteriaceae is significantly influenced by the medium. (Top) Experiment comparing salsolinol production in four commonly used laboratory media in comparison to sSIM. (Bottom) Select organisms were grown in sSIM both with and without the addition of 4% ethanol. Each bar represents the mean ± S.E.M of quadruplicate cultures.
FIGURE 5Microbial production of acetaldehyde from ethanol by alcohol dehydrogenase could provide acetaldehyde by either an enzymatic or non-enzymatic mechanism of salsolinol synthesis.