Academic Journal

Engineering the gut microbiota to treat hyperammonemia.

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Engineering the gut microbiota to treat hyperammonemia.
المؤلفون: Shen, Ting-Chin David1, Albenberg, Lindsey2, Bittinger, Kyle3, Chehoud, Christel, Ying-Yu Chen1, Judge, Colleen A.2, Chau, Lillian1, Ni, Josephine1, Sheng, Michael1, Lin, Andrew1, Wilkin, Benjamin J.4, Buza, Elizabeth L.5, Lewis, James D.1, Daikhin, Yevgeny6, Nissim, liana6, Yudkoff, Marc6, Bushman, Frederic D.3, Wu, Gary D.1 gdwu@mail.med.upenn.edu
المصدر: Journal of Clinical Investigation. Jul2015, Vol. 125 Issue 7, p2841-2850. 10p. 7 Graphs.
مصطلحات موضوعية: *GUT microbiome, *UREASE, *AMMONIA, *LIVER diseases, *LABORATORY mice
مستخلص: Increasing evidence indicates that the gut microbiota can be altered to ameliorate or prevent disease states, and engineering the gut microbiota to therapeutically modulate host metabolism is an emerging goal of microbiome research. In the intestine, bacterial urease converts host-derived urea to ammonia and carbon dioxide, contributing to hyperammonemia-associated neurotoxicity and encephalopathy in patients with liver disease. Here, we engineered murine gut microbiota to reduce urease activity. Animals were depleted of their preexisting gut microbiota and then inoculated with altered Schaedler flora (ASF), a defined consortium of 8 bacteria with minimal urease gene content. This protocol resulted in establishment of a persistent new community that promoted a long-term reduction in fecal urease activity and ammonia production. Moreover, in a murine model of hepatic injury, ASF transplantation was associated with decreased morbidity and mortality. These results provide proof of concept that inoculation of a prepared host with a defined gut microbiota can lead to durable metabolic changes with therapeutic utility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
قاعدة البيانات: Academic Search Index
الوصف
تدمد:00219738
DOI:10.1172/JCI79214