Dietary fibre directs microbial tryptophan metabolism via metabolic interactions in the gut microbiota

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Dietary fibre directs microbial tryptophan metabolism via metabolic interactions in the gut microbiota. / Sinha, Anurag K.; Laursen, Martin F.; Brinck, Julius E.; Rybtke, Morten L.; Hjørne, Anna Pii; Procházková, Nicola; Pedersen, Mikael; Roager, Henrik M.; Licht, Tine R.

I: Nature Microbiology, 2024.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Sinha, AK, Laursen, MF, Brinck, JE, Rybtke, ML, Hjørne, AP, Procházková, N, Pedersen, M, Roager, HM & Licht, TR 2024, 'Dietary fibre directs microbial tryptophan metabolism via metabolic interactions in the gut microbiota', Nature Microbiology. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-024-01737-3

APA

Sinha, A. K., Laursen, M. F., Brinck, J. E., Rybtke, M. L., Hjørne, A. P., Procházková, N., Pedersen, M., Roager, H. M., & Licht, T. R. (Accepteret/In press). Dietary fibre directs microbial tryptophan metabolism via metabolic interactions in the gut microbiota. Nature Microbiology. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-024-01737-3

Vancouver

Sinha AK, Laursen MF, Brinck JE, Rybtke ML, Hjørne AP, Procházková N o.a. Dietary fibre directs microbial tryptophan metabolism via metabolic interactions in the gut microbiota. Nature Microbiology. 2024. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-024-01737-3

Author

Sinha, Anurag K. ; Laursen, Martin F. ; Brinck, Julius E. ; Rybtke, Morten L. ; Hjørne, Anna Pii ; Procházková, Nicola ; Pedersen, Mikael ; Roager, Henrik M. ; Licht, Tine R. / Dietary fibre directs microbial tryptophan metabolism via metabolic interactions in the gut microbiota. I: Nature Microbiology. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{0a50fb55a9b44998ad6cade6d52334c9,
title = "Dietary fibre directs microbial tryptophan metabolism via metabolic interactions in the gut microbiota",
abstract = "Tryptophan is catabolized by gut microorganisms resulting in a wide range of metabolites implicated in both beneficial and adverse host effects. How gut microbial tryptophan metabolism is directed towards indole, associated with chronic kidney disease, or towards protective indolelactic acid (ILA) and indolepropionic acid (IPA) is unclear. Here we used in vitro culturing and animal experiments to assess gut microbial competition for tryptophan and the resulting metabolites in a controlled three-species defined community and in complex undefined human faecal communities. The generation of specific tryptophan-derived metabolites was not predominantly determined by the abundance of tryptophan-metabolizing bacteria, but rather by substrate-dependent regulation of specific metabolic pathways. Indole-producing Escherichia coli and ILA- and IPA-producing Clostridium sporogenes competed for tryptophan within the three-species community in vitro and in vivo. Importantly, fibre-degrading Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron affected this competition by cross-feeding monosaccharides to E. coli. This inhibited indole production through catabolite repression, thus making more tryptophan available to C. sporogenes, resulting in increased ILA and IPA production. The fibre-dependent reduction in indole was confirmed using human faecal cultures and faecal-microbiota-transplanted gnotobiotic mice. Our findings explain why consumption of fermentable fibres suppresses indole production but promotes the generation of other tryptophan metabolites associated with health benefits.",
author = "Sinha, {Anurag K.} and Laursen, {Martin F.} and Brinck, {Julius E.} and Rybtke, {Morten L.} and Hj{\o}rne, {Anna Pii} and Nicola Proch{\'a}zkov{\'a} and Mikael Pedersen and Roager, {Henrik M.} and Licht, {Tine R.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} The Author(s) 2024.",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1038/s41564-024-01737-3",
language = "English",
journal = "Nature Microbiology",
issn = "2058-5276",
publisher = "nature publishing group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Dietary fibre directs microbial tryptophan metabolism via metabolic interactions in the gut microbiota

AU - Sinha, Anurag K.

AU - Laursen, Martin F.

AU - Brinck, Julius E.

AU - Rybtke, Morten L.

AU - Hjørne, Anna Pii

AU - Procházková, Nicola

AU - Pedersen, Mikael

AU - Roager, Henrik M.

AU - Licht, Tine R.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Tryptophan is catabolized by gut microorganisms resulting in a wide range of metabolites implicated in both beneficial and adverse host effects. How gut microbial tryptophan metabolism is directed towards indole, associated with chronic kidney disease, or towards protective indolelactic acid (ILA) and indolepropionic acid (IPA) is unclear. Here we used in vitro culturing and animal experiments to assess gut microbial competition for tryptophan and the resulting metabolites in a controlled three-species defined community and in complex undefined human faecal communities. The generation of specific tryptophan-derived metabolites was not predominantly determined by the abundance of tryptophan-metabolizing bacteria, but rather by substrate-dependent regulation of specific metabolic pathways. Indole-producing Escherichia coli and ILA- and IPA-producing Clostridium sporogenes competed for tryptophan within the three-species community in vitro and in vivo. Importantly, fibre-degrading Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron affected this competition by cross-feeding monosaccharides to E. coli. This inhibited indole production through catabolite repression, thus making more tryptophan available to C. sporogenes, resulting in increased ILA and IPA production. The fibre-dependent reduction in indole was confirmed using human faecal cultures and faecal-microbiota-transplanted gnotobiotic mice. Our findings explain why consumption of fermentable fibres suppresses indole production but promotes the generation of other tryptophan metabolites associated with health benefits.

AB - Tryptophan is catabolized by gut microorganisms resulting in a wide range of metabolites implicated in both beneficial and adverse host effects. How gut microbial tryptophan metabolism is directed towards indole, associated with chronic kidney disease, or towards protective indolelactic acid (ILA) and indolepropionic acid (IPA) is unclear. Here we used in vitro culturing and animal experiments to assess gut microbial competition for tryptophan and the resulting metabolites in a controlled three-species defined community and in complex undefined human faecal communities. The generation of specific tryptophan-derived metabolites was not predominantly determined by the abundance of tryptophan-metabolizing bacteria, but rather by substrate-dependent regulation of specific metabolic pathways. Indole-producing Escherichia coli and ILA- and IPA-producing Clostridium sporogenes competed for tryptophan within the three-species community in vitro and in vivo. Importantly, fibre-degrading Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron affected this competition by cross-feeding monosaccharides to E. coli. This inhibited indole production through catabolite repression, thus making more tryptophan available to C. sporogenes, resulting in increased ILA and IPA production. The fibre-dependent reduction in indole was confirmed using human faecal cultures and faecal-microbiota-transplanted gnotobiotic mice. Our findings explain why consumption of fermentable fibres suppresses indole production but promotes the generation of other tryptophan metabolites associated with health benefits.

U2 - 10.1038/s41564-024-01737-3

DO - 10.1038/s41564-024-01737-3

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 38918470

AN - SCOPUS:85196835156

JO - Nature Microbiology

JF - Nature Microbiology

SN - 2058-5276

ER -

ID: 397599984