Acarbose impairs gut Bacteroides growth by targeting intracellular glucosidases.

IF 5.1 1区 生物学 Q1 MICROBIOLOGY
mBio Pub Date : 2024-11-20 DOI:10.1128/mbio.01506-24
Haley A Brown, Adeline L Morris, Nicholas A Pudlo, Ashley E Hopkins, Eric C Martens, Jonathan L Golob, Nicole M Koropatkin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Acarbose is a type 2 diabetes medicine that prevents dietary starch breakdown into glucose by inhibiting host amylase and glucosidase enzymes. Numerous gut species in the Bacteroides genus enzymatically break down starch and change in relative abundance within the gut microbiome in acarbose-treated individuals. To mechanistically explain this observation, we used two model starch-degrading Bacteroides, Bacteroides ovatus (Bo), and Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron (Bt). Bt growth on starch polysaccharides is severely impaired by acarbose, whereas Bo growth is much less affected by the drug. The Bacteroides use a starch utilization system (Sus) to grow on starch. We hypothesized that Bo and Bt Sus enzymes are differentially inhibited by acarbose. Instead, we discovered that although acarbose primarily targets the Sus periplasmic GH97 enzymes in both organisms, the drug affects starch processing at multiple other points. Acarbose competes for transport through the TonB-dependent SusC proteins and binds to the Sus transcriptional regulators. Furthermore, Bo expresses a non-Sus GH97 (BoGH97D) when grown in starch with acarbose. The Bt homolog, BtGH97H, is not expressed in the same conditions, nor can overexpression of BoGH97D complement the Bt growth inhibition in the presence of acarbose. This work informs us about unexpected complexities of Sus function and regulation in Bacteroides, including variation between related species. Furthermore, this indicates that the gut microbiome may be a source of variable response to acarbose treatment for diabetes.

Importance: Acarbose is a type 2 diabetes medication that works primarily by stopping starch breakdown into glucose in the small intestine. This is accomplished by the inhibition of host enzymes, leading to better blood sugar control via reduced ability to derive glucose from dietary starches. The drug and undigested starch travel to the large intestine where acarbose interferes with the ability of some bacteria to grow on starch. However, little is known about how gut bacteria interact with acarbose, including microbes that can use starch as a carbon source. Here, we show that two gut species, Bacteroides ovatus (Bo) and Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron (Bt), respond differently to acarbose: Bt growth is inhibited by acarbose, while Bo growth is less affected. We reveal a complex set of mechanisms involving differences in starch import and sensing behind the different Bo and Bt responses. This indicates the gut microbiome may be a source of variable response to acarbose treatment for diabetes via complex mechanisms in common gut microbes.

阿卡波糖通过靶向细胞内葡萄糖苷酶抑制肠道乳酸杆菌的生长。
阿卡波糖是一种 2 型糖尿病药物,它通过抑制宿主淀粉酶和葡萄糖苷酶来阻止饮食中的淀粉分解成葡萄糖。乳杆菌属中的许多肠道物种都能酶解淀粉,在阿卡波糖治疗的个体中,这些物种在肠道微生物组中的相对丰度发生了变化。为了从机理上解释这一观察结果,我们使用了两种典型的淀粉降解乳杆菌,即卵形乳杆菌(Bo)和Bt乳杆菌(Bt)。阿卡波糖会严重影响 Bt 在淀粉多糖上的生长,而 Bo 的生长受药物的影响要小得多。杆菌利用淀粉利用系统(Sus)在淀粉上生长。我们假设,阿卡波糖对 Bo 和 Bt 的 Sus 酶有不同的抑制作用。但我们发现,虽然阿卡波糖主要针对这两种生物的 Sus 质外 GH97 酶,但这种药物会影响其他多个点的淀粉加工。阿卡波糖通过依赖于 TonB 的 SusC 蛋白竞争转运,并与 Sus 转录调节因子结合。此外,在含有阿卡波糖的淀粉中生长时,Bo 会表达一种非 Sus GH97(BoGH97D)。Bt 同源物 BtGH97H 在相同条件下不表达,BoGH97D 的过表达也不能补充 Bt 在阿卡波糖存在下的生长抑制。这项工作让我们了解到乳杆菌中 Sus 功能和调控的意外复杂性,包括相关物种之间的差异。此外,这表明肠道微生物组可能是对阿卡波糖治疗糖尿病的不同反应的来源:阿卡波糖是一种 2 型糖尿病药物,主要通过阻止淀粉在小肠中分解为葡萄糖而发挥作用。阿卡波糖是一种 2 型糖尿病药物,其主要作用是阻止淀粉在小肠中分解为葡萄糖,通过抑制宿主酶来实现这一目的,从而降低从膳食淀粉中获取葡萄糖的能力,更好地控制血糖。药物和未消化的淀粉进入大肠后,阿卡波糖会干扰某些细菌在淀粉上生长的能力。然而,人们对肠道细菌如何与阿卡波糖相互作用知之甚少,其中包括可以利用淀粉作为碳源的微生物。在这里,我们展示了两种肠道细菌,即卵形乳杆菌(Bo)和太田乳杆菌(Bt)对阿卡波糖的不同反应:Bt 的生长受到阿卡波糖的抑制,而 Bo 的生长受到的影响较小。我们揭示了一套复杂的机制,其中涉及淀粉输入和感知的差异,而这正是 Bo 和 Bt 不同反应的背后原因。这表明肠道微生物组可能是通过普通肠道微生物的复杂机制对阿卡波糖治疗糖尿病产生不同反应的一个来源。
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来源期刊
mBio
mBio MICROBIOLOGY-
CiteScore
10.50
自引率
3.10%
发文量
762
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: mBio® is ASM''s first broad-scope, online-only, open access journal. mBio offers streamlined review and publication of the best research in microbiology and allied fields.
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