| Literature DB >> 35484230 |
Adam L Edwinson1, Lu Yang2, Stephanie Peters1, Nikita Hanning1,3, Patricio Jeraldo4, Pratik Jagtap5, Joshua B Simpson6, Tzu-Yi Yang5, Praveen Kumar5, Subina Mehta5, Asha Nair2, Margaret Breen-Lyles1, Lakshmikanth Chikkamenahalli1, Rondell P Graham7, Benedicte De Winter3,8, Robin Patel9, Surendra Dasari2, Purna Kashyap1, Timothy Griffin5, Jun Chen2, Gianrico Farrugia1, Matthew R Redinbo6,10, Madhusudan Grover11.
Abstract
Intestinal proteases mediate digestion and immune signalling, while increased gut proteolytic activity disrupts the intestinal barrier and generates visceral hypersensitivity, which is common in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). However, the mechanisms controlling protease function are unclear. Here we show that members of the gut microbiota suppress intestinal proteolytic activity through production of unconjugated bilirubin. This occurs via microbial β-glucuronidase-mediated conversion of bilirubin conjugates. Metagenomic analysis of faecal samples from patients with post-infection IBS (n = 52) revealed an altered gut microbiota composition, in particular a reduction in Alistipes taxa, and high gut proteolytic activity driven by specific host serine proteases compared with controls. Germ-free mice showed 10-fold higher proteolytic activity compared with conventional mice. Colonization with microbiota samples from high proteolytic activity IBS patients failed to suppress proteolytic activity in germ-free mice, but suppression of proteolytic activity was achieved with colonization using microbiota from healthy donors. High proteolytic activity mice had higher intestinal permeability, a higher relative abundance of Bacteroides and a reduction in Alistipes taxa compared with low proteolytic activity mice. High proteolytic activity IBS patients had lower fecal β-glucuronidase activity and end-products of bilirubin deconjugation. Mice treated with unconjugated bilirubin and β-glucuronidase-overexpressing E. coli significantly reduced proteolytic activity, while inhibitors of microbial β-glucuronidases increased proteolytic activity. Together, these data define a disease-relevant mechanism of host-microbial interaction that maintains protease homoeostasis in the gut.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35484230 PMCID: PMC9081267 DOI: 10.1038/s41564-022-01103-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Microbiol ISSN: 2058-5276 Impact factor: 30.964