Literature DB >> 33651646

Dietary vitamin K is remodeled by gut microbiota and influences community composition.

Jessie L Ellis1,2, J Philip Karl3, Angela M Oliverio4, Xueyan Fu1, Jason W Soares5, Benjamin E Wolfe6, Christopher J Hernandez7, Joel B Mason1,2, Sarah L Booth1.   

Abstract

Vitamins have well-established roles in bacterial metabolism. Menaquinones (MKn, n = prenyl units in sidechain) are bacterially produced forms of vitamin K produced by the gut microbiota and consumed in the diet. Little is known about the influence of dietary vitamin K quinones on gut microbial composition and MKn production. Here, male and female C57BL6 mice were fed a vitamin K deficient diet or vitamin K sufficient diets containing phylloquinone (PK, plant-based vitamin K form), MK4, and/or MK9. DNA was extracted from cecal contents and 16S sequencing conducted to assess microbial composition. Cecal microbial community composition was significantly different in vitamin K deficient female mice compared to females on vitamin K sufficient diets (all p < .007). Parallel trends were seen in male mice, but were not statistically significant (all p > .05 but <0.1). Next, stable isotope-labeled vitamin K quinones were supplemented to male and female C57BL6 mice (2H7PK, 13C11MK4, 2H7MK7, 2H7MK9) and to an in vitro fermentation model inoculated with human stool (2H7PK, 2H7MK4, 2H7MK9, or vitamin K precursor 2H8-menadione). Vitamin K quinones in feces and culture aliquots were measured using LC-MS. In vivo, supplemented vitamin K quinones were remodeled to other MKn (2H7- or 13C6-labeled MK4, MK10, MK11, and MK12), but in vitro only the precursor 2H8-menadione was remodeled to 2H7MK4, 2H7MK9, 2H7MK10, and 2H7MK11. These results suggest that dietary vitamin K deficiency alters the gut microbial community composition. Further studies are needed to determine if menadione generated by host metabolism may serve as an intermediate in dietary vitamin K remodeling in vivo.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Gut microbiota; menaquinone; metabolism; micronutrient; stable isotope; vitamin K

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33651646      PMCID: PMC7928036          DOI: 10.1080/19490976.2021.1887721

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gut Microbes        ISSN: 1949-0976


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