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A widely distributed gene cluster compensates for uricase loss in hominids

Authors :
Yuanyuan Liu
J. Bryce Jarman
Yen S. Low
Steven Huang
Haoqing Chen
Mary E. DeFeo
Kazuma Sekiba
Bi-Huei Hou
Calyani Ganesan
Alan C. Pao
Saurabh Gombar
Dylan Dodd
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

SummaryApproximately 15% of US adults have circulating levels of uric acid above its solubility limit, which is causally linked to the disease gout. In most mammals, uric acid elimination is facilitated by the enzyme uricase. However, human uricase is a pseudogene, having been inactivated early in hominid evolution. Though it has long been known that uric acid is eliminated in the gut, the role of the gut microbiota in hyperuricemia has not been studied. Here we identify a widely distributed bacterial gene cluster that encodes a pathway for uric acid degradation. Stable isotope tracing demonstrates that gut bacteria metabolize uric acid to xanthine or short chain fatty acids. Ablation of the microbiota in uricase-deficient mice causes severe hyperuricemia, and anaerobe-targeted antibiotics increase the risk of gout in humans. These data reveal a role for the gut microbiota in uric acid excretion and highlight the potential for microbiome-targeted therapeutics in hyperuricemia.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7fa5b097eba83b5e25880e7130892f28
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.07.24.501321