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Chemical Impacts of the Microbiome Across Scales Reveal Novel Conjugated Bile Acids

Authors :
da Silva Ramos R
Mitchell P. Christy
Nizet
Fernando Vargas
Alison Vrbanac
Dionicio Siegel
John T. Chang
Lim M
Anupriya Tripathi
Orit Poulsen
Rob Knight
Pieter C. Dorrestein
Michael J. Meehan
Kathryn A. Patras
Brigid S. Boland
Julia Gauglitz
Taren Thron
Kyung E. Rhee
Robert A. Quinn
Barbara I. Kazmierczak
Neha Garg
Robert Bussell
Julie C. Lumeng
Mingxun Wang
Alexander A. Aksenov
Sarkis K. Mazmanian
Marie E. Egan
William J. Sandborn
Greg Humphrey
Gabriel G. Haddad
Rishi K. Jain
Andrew T. Nelson
Alexey V. Melnik
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

A mosaic of cross-phyla chemical interactions occurs between all metazoans and their microbiomes. In humans, the gut harbors the heaviest microbial load, but many organs, particularly those with a mucosal surface, associate with highly adapted and evolved microbial consortia1. The microbial residents within these organ systems are increasingly well characterized, yielding a good understanding of human microbiome composition, but we have yet to elucidate the full chemical impact the microbiome exerts on an animal and the breadth of the chemical diversity it contributes2. A number of molecular families are known to be shaped by the microbiome including short-chain fatty acids, indoles, aromatic amino acid metabolites, complex polysaccharides, and host lipids; such as sphingolipids and bile acids3–11. These metabolites profoundly affect host physiology and are being explored for their roles in both health and disease. Considering the diversity of the human microbiome, numbering over 40,000 operational taxonomic units12, a plethora of molecular diversity remains to be discovered. Here, we use unique mass spectrometry informatics approaches and data mapping onto a murine 3D-model13–15to provide an untargeted assessment of the chemical diversity between germ-free (GF) and colonized mice (specific-pathogen free, SPF), and report the finding of novel bile acids produced by the microbiome in both mice and humans that have evaded characterization despite 170 years of research on bile acid chemistry16.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7794995421a15cca9a2a4747781fb93a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/654756