| Literature DB >> 31932631 |
Sarah Ducastel1, Véronique Touche1, Mohamed-Sami Trabelsi1, Alexis Boulinguiez1, Laura Butruille1, Margaux Nawrot1, Simon Peschard1, Oscar Chávez-Talavera1, Emilie Dorchies1, Emmanuelle Vallez1, Jean-Sébastien Annicotte2, Steve Lancel1, Olivier Briand1, Kadiombo Bantubungi1, Sandrine Caron1, Laure B Bindels3, Nathalie M Delzenne3, Anne Tailleux1, Bart Staels4, Sophie Lestavel1.
Abstract
The gut microbiota participates in the control of energy homeostasis partly through fermentation of dietary fibers hence producing short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), which in turn promote the secretion of the incretin Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 (GLP-1) by binding to the SCFA receptors FFAR2 and FFAR3 on enteroendocrine L-cells. We have previously shown that activation of the nuclear Farnesoid X Receptor (FXR) decreases the L-cell response to glucose. Here, we investigated whether FXR also regulates the SCFA-induced GLP-1 secretion. GLP-1 secretion in response to SCFAs was evaluated ex vivo in murine colonic biopsies and in colonoids of wild-type (WT) and FXR knock-out (KO) mice, in vitro in GLUTag and NCI-H716 L-cells activated with the synthetic FXR agonist GW4064 and in vivo in WT and FXR KO mice after prebiotic supplementation. SCFA-induced GLP-1 secretion was blunted in colonic biopsies from GW4064-treated mice and enhanced in FXR KO colonoids. In vitro FXR activation inhibited GLP-1 secretion in response to SCFAs and FFAR2 synthetic ligands, mainly by decreasing FFAR2 expression and downstream Gαq-signaling. FXR KO mice displayed elevated colonic FFAR2 mRNA levels and increased plasma GLP-1 levels upon local supply of SCFAs with prebiotic supplementation. Our results demonstrate that FXR activation decreases L-cell GLP-1 secretion in response to inulin-derived SCFA by reducing FFAR2 expression and signaling. Inactivation of intestinal FXR using bile acid sequestrants or synthetic antagonists in combination with prebiotic supplementation may be a promising therapeutic approach to boost the incretin axis in type 2 diabetes.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 31932631 PMCID: PMC6957696 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-56743-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1FXR regulates GLP-1 secretion in response to SCFAs ex vivo in the murine colon. (a) Active GLP-1 was measured in supernatants of colonic biopsies from WT mice 5 day-treated with vehicle or GW4064 (30 mg/kg), stimulated with control medium or medium plus Butyrate (1 mmol/l). Data are presented as mean ± SEM (white bars for vehicle-treated mice and grey bars for GW4064-treated mice). (n = 4 mice per group with 3 colonic biopsies per mouse and per stimulation condition). Two-way ANOVA followed by Bonferronni’s post hoc test. *p < 0.05 **p < 0.01. (b) Active GLP-1 was measured in supernatants of WT and FXR KO colonoids stimulated for 2 h with control buffer or buffer plus SCFA mix (acetate 5 mmol/l, propionate 1 mmol/l and butyrate 1 mmol/l). Fold induction compared to WT control condition which was set at 1 (absolute values (mean ± SD) of GLP-1 in the control condition: 0.07 ± 0.09 fmol/µg cell proteins). Data are presented as mean ± SEM of two independent experiments (white bars for WT colonoids and hatched bars for FXR KO colonoids). Two-way ANOVA followed by Bonferronni’s post hoc test. **p < 0.01 ***p < 0.001.
Figure 2FXR activation decreases GLP-1 secretion in response to SCFA and synthetic FFAR2 agonists in vitro in murine and human L-cells. Active GLP-1 was measured in supernatants of murine GLUTag (a) and human NCI-H716 (b) cells treated for 24 h with GW4064 (5 µmol/l) and stimulated or not for 1 h (GLUTag) or 2 h (NCI-H716) with Glucose 5.6 mmol/l and Propionate 1 mmol/l, Butyrate 1 mmol/l, CMTB 10 µmol/l, PA 10 µmol/l or AR420626 10 µmol/l. Fold induction compared to control condition (DMSO treated cells/control medium) which was set at 1 (absolute values (mean ± SD) of GLP-1 in control conditions: DMSO treated GLUTag cells/control medium 0.88 ± 0.66 fmol/µg cell proteins; DMSO treated NCI-H716 cells/control medium 0.65 ± 0.51 fmol/µg cell proteins). Data are presented as mean ± SEM of at least three independent experiments (white bars for DMSO-treated cells and grey bars for GW4064-treated cells). Two-way ANOVA followed by Bonferronni’s post hoc test. *p < 0.05 **p < 0.01 ***p < 0.001 for secretagogue effect; $$p < 0.01 $$$p < 0.001 for FXR activation effect.
Figure 3FXR regulates Ffar2, but not Ffar3 gene expression. (a) Ffar2 and Ffar3 mRNA levels were quantified by qPCR on cDNA from GLUTag cells treated for 24 h with GW4064 (5 µmol/l). Data are presented as mean ± SD. Fold induction compared to control condition (DMSO) which was set at 1 (white bars for DMSO-treated cells and grey bars for GW4064-treated cells). Student’s t-test. ***p < 0.001. (b–d) Ffar2 and Ffar3 mRNA levels were quantified by qPCR on cDNA from colon of (b) WT mice treated by gavage for 5 days with vehicle or GW4064 (30 mpk) (n = 6 mice per group) (white bars for vehicle-treated mice and grey bars for GW4064-treated mice); (c) WT and FXR KO mice (n = 4 mice per group) (white bars for WT mice and hatched bars for FXR KO mice); (d) ob/ob WT mice treated with vehicle or Colesevelam (2%) for 3 weeks (n = 8 mice treated with vehicle and 6 mice treated with colesevelam) (white bars for control mice and light grey bars for colesevelam-treated mice). Data are presented as mean ± SEM. Student’s t-test *p < 0.05 **p < 0.01.
Figure 4FXR activation decreases FFAR2 downstream Gαq-signaling in GLUTag L-cells. (a–c) GLUTag cells, treated or not with GW4064 5 µmol/l for 24 h, were loaded with Fluo-4AM. Calcium changes were assessed by calculating ΔF/F0 = (Fluorescence measured at each time point – Fluorescence at T0)/Fluorescence at T0, and normalized to fluorescence measured at each time point in non-stimulated control cells. Representative kinetic response to acute stimulation with butyrate (100 mmol/l) (a), 4-CMTB (10 µmol/l) (b), or PA (10 µmol/l) (c). Data are presented as mean ± SEM of three independent experiments. Student’s t-test *p < 0.05 **p < 0.01. (d) IP3 production was assessed with IP-One assay (Cisbio Bioassays) in GLUTag cells treated for 24 h with GW4064 (5 µmol/l) and stimulated or not for 90 min with PA 10 µmol/l or PA 100 µmol/l. Fold induction compared to non-stimulated cells which were set at 1 (absolute values (mean ± SD) of IP1 concentrations in control conditions: non-stimulated/DMSO cells 231.8 ± 76.8 nmol/L; non-stimulated/GW4064 cells 285.2 ± 89.1 nmol/L). Data are presented as mean ± SEM of three independent experiments (white bars for DMSO-treated cells and grey bars for GW4064-treated bars). Two-way ANOVA followed by Bonferronni’s post hoc test. *p < 0.05 **p < 0.01 ***p < 0.001 for significant difference to non-stimulated cells; $p < 0.05 $$$p < 0.001 for significant difference to other stimulated cells conditions.
Figure 5FXR deficiency enhances plasma GLP-1 levels in response to colonic SCFA supply in HFD-fed mice. Plasma levels of active GLP-1 were assessed, 1 h after Sitagliptin gavage, in FXR KO mice and their WT littermates after 14 weeks of HFD supplemented or not with the prebiotics ITF. Data are presented as boxplots (from the 25th to 75th percentiles). The whiskers are drawn down to the minimum and up to the maximum. (n = 6 mice per group, except in group FXR KO without ITF n = 4 mice). Two-way ANOVA followed by Bonferronni’s post hoc test. **p < 0.01 ***p < 0.001.