Products of gut microbial Toll/interleukin-1 receptor domain NADase activities in gnotobiotic mice and Bangladeshi children with malnutrition

无菌小鼠和孟加拉国营养不良儿童肠道微生物 Toll/白细胞介素-1受体结构域NADase活性的产物

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作者:James S Weagley,Mark Zaydman,Siddarth Venkatesh,Yo Sasaki,Neha Damaraju,Alex Yenkin,William Buchser,Dmitry A Rodionov,Andrei Osterman,Tahmeed Ahmed,Michael J Barratt,Aaron DiAntonio,Jeffrey Milbrandt,Jeffrey I Gordon

Abstract

Perturbed gut microbiome development has been linked to childhood malnutrition. Here, we characterize bacterial Toll/interleukin-1 receptor (TIR) protein domains that metabolize nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD), a co-enzyme with far-reaching effects on human physiology. A consortium of 26 human gut bacterial strains, representing the diversity of TIRs observed in the microbiome and the NAD hydrolase (NADase) activities of a subset of 152 bacterial TIRs assayed in vitro, was introduced into germ-free mice. Integrating mass spectrometry and microbial RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) with consortium membership manipulation disclosed that a variant of cyclic-ADPR (v-cADPR-x) is a specific product of TIR NADase activity and a prominent, colonization-discriminatory, taxon-specific metabolite. Guided by bioinformatic analyses of biochemically validated TIRs, we find that acute malnutrition is associated with decreased fecal levels of genes encoding TIRs known or predicted to generate v-cADPR-x, as well as decreased levels of the metabolite itself. These results underscore the need to consider microbiome TIR NADases when evaluating NAD metabolism in the human holobiont. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01889329.

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