Gut microbiota-derived butyric acid regulates calcific aortic valve disease pathogenesis by modulating GAPDH lactylation and butyrylation

IF 23.7 Q1 MICROBIOLOGY
iMeta Pub Date : 2025-05-19 DOI:10.1002/imt2.70048
Chunli Wang, Zongtao Liu, Tingwen Zhou, Jiaqin Wu, Fan Feng, Shunshun Wang, Qingjia Chi, Yongqiang Sha, Shuai Zha, Songren Shu, Linghang Qu, Qianqian Du, Huiming Yu, Li Yang, Anna Malashicheva, Nianguo Dong, Fei Xie, Guixue Wang, Kang Xu
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Abstract

The involvement of gut microbiota in calcific aortic valve disease (CAVD) pathogenesis remains underexplored. Here, we provide evidence for a strong association between the gut microbiota and CAVD development. ApoE−/− mice were stratified into easy- and difficult- to calcify groups using neural network and cluster analyses, and subsequent faecal transplantation and dirty cage sharing experiments demonstrated that the microbiota from difficult-to-calcify mice significantly ameliorated CAVD. 16S rRNA sequencing revealed that reduced abundance of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii (F. prausnitzii) was significantly associated with increased calcification severity. Association analysis identified F. prausnitzii-derived butyric acid as a key anti-calcific metabolite. These findings were validated in a clinical cohort (25 CAVD patients vs. 25 controls), where serum butyric acid levels inversely correlated with disease severity. Functional experiments showed that butyric acid effectively hindered osteogenic differentiation in human aortic valve interstitial cells (hVICs) and attenuated CAVD progression in mice. Isotope labeling and 13C flux analyses confirmed that butyric acid produced in the intestine can reach heart tissue, where it reshapes glycolysis by specifically modifying GAPDH. Mechanistically, butyric acid-induced butyrylation (Kbu) at lysine 263 of GAPDH competitively inhibited lactylation (Kla) at the same site, thereby counteracting glycolysis-driven calcification. These findings uncover a novel mechanism through which F. prausnitzii and its metabolite butyric acid contribute to the preservation of valve function in CAVD, highlighting the gut microbiota-metabolite-glycolysis axis as a promising therapeutic target.

Abstract Image

肠道微生物来源的丁酸通过调节GAPDH乳酸化和丁基化调节钙化性主动脉瓣疾病的发病机制
肠道微生物群在钙化主动脉瓣病(CAVD)发病机制中的作用仍未得到充分探讨。在这里,我们为肠道微生物群和CAVD发展之间的密切联系提供了证据。利用神经网络和聚类分析将ApoE - / -小鼠分为易钙化组和难钙化组,随后的粪便移植和脏笼共享实验表明,来自难钙化小鼠的微生物群显著改善了CAVD。16S rRNA测序显示,prausnitzii Faecalibacterium (f.p prausnitzii)丰度的降低与钙化严重程度的增加显著相关。关联分析发现prausnitzii衍生的丁酸是关键的抗钙化代谢物。这些发现在临床队列(25例CAVD患者与25例对照组)中得到了验证,其中血清丁酸水平与疾病严重程度呈负相关。功能实验表明,丁酸能有效抑制人主动脉瓣间质细胞(hvic)的成骨分化,减缓小鼠主动脉瓣动脉粥样硬化(CAVD)的进展。同位素标记和13C通量分析证实,肠道产生的丁酸可以到达心脏组织,通过特异性修饰GAPDH重塑糖酵解。在机制上,丁酸诱导的GAPDH赖氨酸263的丁基化(Kbu)竞争性地抑制了同一位点的乳酸化(Kla),从而抵消了糖酵解驱动的钙化。这些发现揭示了F. prausnitzii及其代谢物丁酸有助于保存CAVD中瓣膜功能的新机制,突出了肠道微生物-代谢物-糖酵解轴是一个有希望的治疗靶点。
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CiteScore
10.80
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