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Gut microbial degradation of organophosphate insecticides-induces glucose intolerance viagluconeogenesis

Authors :
Velmurugan, Ganesan
Ramprasath, Tharmarajan
Swaminathan, Krishnan
Mithieux, Gilles
Rajendhran, Jeyaprakash
Dhivakar, Mani
Parthasarathy, Ayothi
Babu, D.D.
Thumburaj, Leishman
Freddy, Allen
Dinakaran, Vasudevan
Puhari, Shanavas
Rekha, Balakrishnan
Christy, Yacob
Anusha, Sivakumar
Divya, Ganesan
Suganya, Kannan
Meganathan, Boominathan
Kalyanaraman, Narayanan
Vasudevan, Varadaraj
Kamaraj, Raju
Karthik, Maruthan
Jeyakumar, Balakrishnan
Abhishek, Albert
Paul, Eldho
Pushpanathan, Muthuirulan
Rajmohan, Rajamani
Velayutham, Kumaravel
Lyon, Alexander
Ramasamy, Subbiah
Source :
Genome Biology; December 2017, Vol. 18 Issue: 1 p1-18, 18p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Organophosphates are the most frequently and largely applied insecticide in the world due to their biodegradable nature. Gut microbes were shown to degrade organophosphates and cause intestinal dysfunction. The diabetogenic nature of organophosphates was recently reported but the underlying molecular mechanism is unclear. We aimed to understand the role of gut microbiota in organophosphate-induced hyperglycemia and to unravel the molecular mechanism behind this process. Here we demonstrate a high prevalence of diabetes among people directly exposed to organophosphates in rural India (nā€‰=ā€‰3080). Correlation and linear regression analysis reveal a strong association between plasma organophosphate residues and HbA1c but no association with acetylcholine esterase was noticed. Chronic treatment of mice with organophosphate for 180 days confirms the induction of glucose intolerance with no significant change in acetylcholine esterase. Further fecal transplantation and culture transplantation experiments confirm the involvement of gut microbiota in organophosphate-induced glucose intolerance. Intestinal metatranscriptomic and host metabolomic analyses reveal that gut microbial organophosphate degradation produces short chain fatty acids like acetic acid, which induces gluconeogenesis and thereby accounts for glucose intolerance. Plasma organophosphate residues are positively correlated with fecal esterase activity and acetate level of human diabetes. Collectively, our results implicate gluconeogenesis as the key mechanism behind organophosphate-induced hyperglycemia, mediated by the organophosphate-degrading potential of gut microbiota. This study reveals the gut microbiome-mediated diabetogenic nature of organophosphates and hence that the usage of these insecticides should be reconsidered.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14747596 and 1474760X
Volume :
18
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Genome Biology
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs41172576
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-016-1134-6