The microbial gbu gene cluster links cardiovascular disease risk associated with red meat consumption to microbiota l-carnitine catabolism

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作者
Jennifer A. Buffa
Kymberleigh A. Romano
Matthew F. Copeland
David B. Cody
Weifei Zhu
Rachel Galvez
Xiaoming Fu
Kathryn Ward
Marc Ferrell
Hong J. Dai
Sarah Skye
Ping Hu
Lin Li
Mirjana Parlov
Amy McMillan
Xingtao Wei
Ina Nemet
Robert A. Koeth
Xinmin S. Li
Zeneng Wang
Naseer Sangwan
Adeline M. Hajjar
Mohammed Dwidar
Taylor L. Weeks
Nathalie Bergeron
Ronald M. Krauss
W. H. Wilson Tang
Federico E. Rey
Joseph A. DiDonato
Valentin Gogonea
G. Frank Gerberick
Jose Carlos Garcia-Garcia
Stanley L. Hazen
机构
[1] Lerner Research Institute,Department of Cardiovascular & Metabolic Sciences
[2] Cleveland Clinic,Center for Microbiome & Human Health
[3] Cleveland Clinic,Life Sciences TPT and Global Biosciences
[4] The Procter & Gamble Company,Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Heart, Vascular and Thoracic Institute
[5] Cleveland Clinic,Department of Biological and Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy
[6] Touro University California,Departments of Pediatrics and Medicine
[7] University of California,Department of Bacteriology
[8] University of Wisconsin-Madison,Department of Chemistry
[9] Cleveland State University,undefined
[10] Abbott Structural Heart,undefined
[11] Dose Biosystems Inc.,undefined
来源
Nature Microbiology | 2022年 / 7卷
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摘要
The heightened cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk observed among omnivores is thought to be linked, in part, to gut microbiota-dependent generation of trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) from l-carnitine, a nutrient abundant in red meat. Gut microbial transformation of l-carnitine into trimethylamine (TMA), the precursor of TMAO, occurs via the intermediate γ-butyrobetaine (γBB). However, the interrelationship of γBB, red meat ingestion and CVD risks, as well as the gut microbial genes responsible for the transformation of γBB to TMA, are unclear. In the present study, we show that plasma γBB levels in individuals from a clinical cohort (n = 2,918) are strongly associated with incident CVD event risks. Culture of human faecal samples and microbial transplantation studies in gnotobiotic mice with defined synthetic communities showed that the introduction of Emergencia timonensis, a human gut microbe that can metabolize γBB into TMA, is sufficient to complete the carnitine → γBB → TMA transformation, elevate TMAO levels and enhance thrombosis potential in recipients after arterial injury. RNA-sequencing analyses of E. timonensis identified a six-gene cluster, herein named the γBB utilization (gbu) gene cluster, which is upregulated in response to γBB. Combinatorial cloning and functional studies identified four genes (gbuA, gbuB, gbuC and gbuE) that are necessary and sufficient to recapitulate the conversion of γBB to TMA when coexpressed in Escherichia coli. Finally, reanalysis of samples (n = 113) from a clinical, randomized diet, intervention study showed that the abundance of faecal gbuA correlates with plasma TMAO and a red meat-rich diet. Our findings reveal a microbial gene cluster that is critical to dietary carnitine → γBB → TMA → TMAO transformation in hosts and contributes to CVD risk.
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页码:73 / 86
页数:13
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