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The human microbiome encodes resistance to the antidiabetic drug acarbose

Authors :
Liping Zhao
Alexei Korennykh
Guojun Wu
Abhishek Biswas
Mohamed S. Donia
Michael A. Estrella
Philip D. Jeffrey
Jared N. Balaich
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

The human microbiome encodes a large repertoire of biochemical enzymes and pathways, most of which remain uncharacterized. Here, using a metagenomics-based search strategy, we discovered that bacterial members of the human gut and oral microbiome encode enzymes that selectively phosphorylate a clinically used antidiabetic drug, acarbose1,2, resulting in its inactivation. Acarbose is an inhibitor of both human and bacterial α-glucosidases3, limiting the ability of the target organism to metabolize complex carbohydrates. Using biochemical assays, X-ray crystallography and metagenomic analyses, we show that microbiome-derived acarbose kinases are specific for acarbose, provide their harbouring organism with a protective advantage against the activity of acarbose, and are widespread in the microbiomes of western and non-western human populations. These results provide an example of widespread microbiome resistance to a non-antibiotic drug, and suggest that acarbose resistance has disseminated in the human microbiome as a defensive strategy against a potential endogenous producer of a closely related molecule. Bacteria in the human gut and oral microbiome encode enzymes that selectively phosphorylate the antidiabetic drug acarbose—an inhibitor of both human and bacterial α-glucosidases—resulting in its inactivation and limiting the drug's effects on the ability of the host to metabolize complex carbohydrates.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
600
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....20cfa8468d8ea049932f3b488cd3e871