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Evaluation of the impact of gut microbiota on uremic solute accumulation by a CE-TOFMS–based metabolomics approach

Authors :
Kei Asaji
Yoshihisa Tomioka
Takehiro Suzuki
Noriko N. Fukuda
Yasutoshi Akiyama
Yoshitomi Kanemitsu
Takaaki Abe
Hiroki Tsukamoto
Yotaro Matsumoto
Koichi Kikuchi
Shinji Fukuda
Tomoyoshi Soga
Eikan Mishima
Akinori Yuri
Chitose Suzuki
Sadayoshi Ito
Chikahisa Mukawa
Hisato Shima
Source :
Kidney International. 92:634-645
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2017.

Abstract

Gut microbiota is involved in the metabolism of uremic solutes. However, the precise influence of microbiota to the retention of uremic solutes in CKD is obscure. To clarify this, we compared adenine-induced renal failure and control mice under germ-free or specific pathogen-free (SPF) conditions, examining the metabolite profiles of plasma, feces, and urine using a capillary electrophoresis time-of-flight mass spectrometry–based approach. Mice with renal failure under germ-free conditions demonstrated significant changes in plasma metabolites. Among 183 detected solutes, plasma levels of 11 solutes, including major uremic toxins, were significantly lower in germ-free mice than in SPF mice with renal failure. These 11 solutes were considered microbiota-derived uremic solutes and included indoxyl sulfate, p -cresyl sulfate, phenyl sulfate, cholate, hippurate, dimethylglycine, γ-guanidinobutyrate, glutarate, 2-hydroxypentanoate, trimethylamine N -oxide, and phenaceturate. Metabolome profiling showed that these solutes were classified into three groups depending on their origins: completely derived from microbiota (indoxyl sulfate, p -cresyl sulfate), derived from both host and microbiota (dimethylglycine), and derived from both microbiota and dietary components (trimethylamine N -oxide). Additionally, germ-free renal failure conditions resulted in the disappearance of colonic short-chain fatty acids, decreased utilization of intestinal amino acids, and more severe renal damage compared with SPF mice with renal failure. Microbiota-derived short-chain fatty acids and efficient amino acid utilization may have a renoprotective effect, and loss of these factors may exacerbate renal damage in germ-free mice with renal failure. Thus, microbiota contributes substantially to the production of harmful uremic solutes, but conversely, growth without microbiota has harmful effects on CKD progression.

Details

ISSN :
00852538
Volume :
92
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Kidney International
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1b1890fdf52026c83d3359b7dd87b6a2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.kint.2017.02.011