| Literature DB >> 32290429 |
Griet Glorieux1, Tessa Gryp1, Alessandra Perna2.
Abstract
Several of the uremic toxins, which are difficult to remove by dialysis, originate from the gut bacterial metabolism. This opens opportunities for novel targets trying to decrease circulating levels of these toxins and their pathophysiological effects. The current review focuses on immunomodulatory effects of these toxins both at their side of origin and in the circulation. In the gut end products of the bacterial metabolism such as p-cresol, trimethylamine and H2S affect the intestinal barrier structure and function while in the circulation the related uremic toxins stimulate cells of the immune system. Both conditions contribute to the pro-inflammatory status of patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Generation and/or absorption of these toxin precursors could be targeted to decrease plasma levels of their respective uremic toxins and to reduce micro-inflammation in CKD.Entities:
Keywords: chronic kidney disease; gut; immune; uremic toxins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32290429 PMCID: PMC7232434 DOI: 10.3390/toxins12040245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1End products of the intestinal bacterial metabolism (I, IAA, pC, TMA, H2S) are transported as such or after detoxification (sulfatation and glucuronidation) towards the liver via the portal vein where the remaining pC and I are conjugated and TMA is oxygenated. The end products of the bacterial and human metabolism are taken up into the circulation (IxS, IAA, pCS, pCG, TMAO, H2S) where some bind to albumin (IxS, IAA, pCS and to a lesser extend pCG). H2S is also generated by different tissues throughout the body. Finally, these compounds are excreted into the urine. Trp: tryptophan; Tyr: tyrosine; Cys: cysteine; I: indole; IAA: indole-3-acetic acid; pC: p-cresol; TMA: trimethylamine; TMAO: trimethylamine N-oxide; pCS: p-cresyl sulfate; pCG: p-cresyl glucuronide; IxS: indoxyl sulfate.
(Patho)physiological effects of intestinally generated uremic toxins and their precursors at their side of origin.
| Metabolites | Side of Origin | (Patho) Physiological Effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| p-Cresol | Colon |
| |
| ↑LDH leakage | [ | ||
| ↓ATP content | |||
| ↓TEER | |||
| ↑Paracellular transport | |||
| Genotoxicity | [ | ||
|
| |||
| ↓IL-12 p40 production | [ | ||
| ↓Respiratory burst activity | [ | ||
| Indole | Colon |
| |
| ↑Mucin2 expression | [ | ||
| Regulation of gut homeostasis | [ | ||
| ↓TNF-α mediated NF-κB activation | [ | ||
| ↓IL-8 expression | |||
| ↑IL-10 expression | |||
| ↑TER | |||
| Indole-3-acetic acid | Colon |
| |
| ↑IL-22 expression | [ | ||
| ↑Antimicrobial C-type lectin REG3G | |||
| Trimethylamine | Colon | ND | |
| H2S | Colon |
| |
| ↑Antibiotic resistance | [ | ||
| Protection against ROS | [ | ||
| Protection against immune cells | [ | ||
| Maintenance of anaerobic conditions | |||
| ↓Butyrate oxidation | [ | ||
|
| |||
| p-Cresyl sulfate | Intestinal epithelial cells and liver |
| |
| ↑Baseline ROS and ↓ROS after stimulation | [ | ||
| ↑Rolling | [ | ||
| ↑Plaque growth and instability | [ | ||
| ↓IFNγ-producing Th1 cells | [ | ||
| ↓Anti-bacterial immune response | [ | ||
| ↓Proliferation of CD43(+) B cell progenitors | [ | ||
| ↑Macrophage activation | |||
| ↓Antigen processing | [ | ||
| Premature aging of immune cells | [ | ||
| p-Cresyl glucuronide | Intestinal epithelial cells and liver |
| |
| Synergistic to pCS: ↑ROS, impaired blood | [ | ||
| flow; vascular leakage | [ | ||
| Indoxyl sulfate | Liver | Anti-inflammatory and tolerizing effect on | [ |
| DCs | |||
|
| |||
| ↑TNF-α→↑HUVEC CX3CL1 | [ | ||
| ↑ROS | [ | ||
| ↑Leukocyte-endothelial cell adhesion | [ | ||
|
| |||
| ↑TNF-α | [ | ||
| ↑NF-κB, ROS, mitochondrial Ca2+ | [ | ||
| overload | |||
| ↓Nrf2 | [ | ||
| Indole-3-acetic acid | Colon |
| |
| ↑peroxidase activity | [ | ||
| ↑Glucose and glutamine metabolism | [ | ||
| ↑Oxygen consumption | [ | ||
| ↑Structural changes and cell death | [ | ||
| ↑Phagocytic activity | [ | ||
| Genotoxicity | [ | ||
| Trimethylamine-oxide | Liver, kidney, and other | ↑VCAM-1 | [ |
| ↑Monocyte-endothelial | |||
| adhesion→↑inflammatory gene expression | |||
| Activates PKC and p-NF-κB | |||
| H2S | Brain, vascular tissue, liver, kidney, RBC, and other |
| |
| ↓Leukocyte-endothelial adhesion | [ | ||
| ↓Leukocyte infiltration | |||
| Regulation of post-translational | [ | ||
| modification of NF-κB pathway | |||
|
| |||
| ↓Pro-inflammatory cytokine production | [ | ||
| ↓COX-2 and NO production | |||
| ↓Macrophage motitlity | |||
| ↓MPO activity | [ | ||
| ↓Inflammation | [ | ||
| ↓Antigen-binding | [ | ||
| ↓Cell lysis (glomerular mesangial cells and T-lymphocytes) | |||
LDH: lactate dehydrogenase; ATP: adenosine triphosphate; TE(E)R: transepithelial (electrical) resistance; IL: interleukin; REG3G: regenerating islet-derived 3 gamma;ND: none described; RBC: red blood cells: ROS: reactive oxygen species; DCs: dendritic cells; HUVEC: human vascular endothelial cells; VCAM: vascular cell adhesion molecule: PKC: protein kinase C; COX: cyclooxygenase; NO: nitric oxide.; MPO: myeloperoxidase. ↓: decreased; ↑: increased.