Tissue-wide metabolomics reveals wide impact of gut microbiota on mice metabolite composition




Zarei Iman, Koistinen Ville M., Kokla Marietta, Klåvus Anton, Farizah Babu Ambrin, Lehtonen Marko, Auriola Seppo, Hanhineva Kati

PublisherNATURE PORTFOLIO

2022

Scientific Reports

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS

SCI REP-UK

15018

12

20

2045-2322

2045-2322

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-19327-w

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-022-19327-w

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/176645884



The essential role of gut microbiota in health and disease is well recognized, but the biochemical details that underlie the beneficial impact remain largely undefined. To maintain its stability, microbiota participates in an interactive host-microbiota metabolic signaling, impacting metabolic phenotypes of the host. Dysbiosis of microbiota results in alteration of certain microbial and host metabolites. Identifying these markers could enhance early detection of certain diseases. We report LC-MS based non-targeted metabolic profiling that demonstrates a large effect of gut microbiota on mammalian tissue metabolites. It was hypothesized that gut microbiota influences the overall biochemistry of host metabolome and this effect is tissue-specific. Thirteen different tissues from germ-free (GF) and conventionally-raised (MPF) C57BL/6NTac mice were selected and their metabolic differences were analyzed. Our study demonstrated a large effect of microbiota on mammalian biochemistry at different tissues and resulted in statistically-significant modulation of metabolites from multiple metabolic pathways (p  ≤ 0.05). Hundreds of molecular features were detected exclusively in one mouse group, with the majority of these being unique to specific tissue. A vast metabolic response of host to metabolites generated by the microbiota was observed, suggesting gut microbiota has a direct impact on host metabolism.


Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 22:43