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Selenium (Se) is an essential trace element that is ubiquitously present in the environment in small concentrations. Essential functions of Se in the human body are manifested through the wide range of proteins, containing selenocysteine as their active center. Such proteins are called selenoproteins which are found in multiple physiological processes like antioxidative defense and the regulation of thyroid hormone functions. Therefore, Se deficiency is known to cause a broad spectrum of physiological impairments, especially in endemic regions with low Se content. Nevertheless, being an essential trace element, Se could exhibit toxic effects, if its intake exceeds tolerable levels. Accordingly, this range between deficiency and overexposure represents optimal Se supply. However, this range was found to be narrower than for any other essential trace element. Together with significantly varying Se concentrations in soil and the presence of specific bioaccumulation factors, this represents a noticeable difficulty in the assessment of Se
epidemiological status. While Se is acting in the body through multiple selenoproteins, its intake occurs mainly in form of small organic or inorganic molecular mass species. Thus, Se exposure not only depends on daily intake but also on the respective chemical form, in which it is present.
The essential functions of selenium have been known for a long time and its primary forms in different food sources have been described. Nevertheless, analytical capabilities for a comprehensive investigation of Se species and their derivatives have been introduced only in the last decades. A new Se compound was identified in 2010 in the blood and tissues of bluefin tuna. It was called selenoneine (SeN) since it is an isologue of naturally occurring antioxidant ergothioneine (ET), where Se replaces sulfur. In the following years, SeN was identified in a number of edible fish species and attracted attention as a new dietary Se source and potentially strong antioxidant. Studies in populations whose diet largely relies on fish revealed that SeN
represents the main non-protein bound Se pool in their blood. First studies, conducted with enriched fish extracts, already demonstrated the high antioxidative potential of SeN and its possible function in the detoxification of methylmercury in fish. Cell culture studies demonstrated, that SeN can utilize the same transporter as ergothioneine, and SeN metabolite was found in human urine.
Until recently, studies on SeN properties were severely limited due to the lack of ways to obtain the pure compound. As a predisposition to this work was firstly a successful approach to SeN synthesis in the University of Graz, utilizing genetically modified yeasts. In the current study, by use of HepG2 liver carcinoma cells, it was demonstrated, that SeN does not cause toxic effectsup to 100 μM concentration in hepatocytes. Uptake experiments showed that SeN is not bioavailable to the used liver cells.
In the next part a blood-brain barrier (BBB) model, based on capillary endothelial cells from the porcine brain, was used to describe the possible transfer of SeN into the central nervous system (CNS). The assessment of toxicity markers in these endothelial cells and monitoring of barrier conditions during transfer experiments demonstrated the absence of toxic effects from SeN on the BBB endothelium up to 100 μM concentration. Transfer data for SeN showed slow but substantial transfer. A statistically significant increase was observed after 48 hours following SeN incubation from the blood-facing side of the barrier. However, an increase in Se content was clearly visible already after 6 hours of incubation with 1 μM of SeN. While the transfer rate of SeN after application of 0.1 μM dose was very close to that for 1 μM, incubation with 10 μM of SeN resulted in a significantly decreased transfer rate. Double-sided application of SeN caused no side-specific transfer of SeN, thus suggesting a passive diffusion mechanism of SeN across the BBB. This data is in accordance with animal studies, where ET accumulation was observed in the rat brain, even though rat BBB does not have the primary ET transporter – OCTN1. Investigation of capillary endothelial cell monolayers after incubation with SeN and reference selenium compounds showed no significant increase of intracellular selenium concentration. Speciesspecific Se measurements in medium samples from apical and basolateral compartments, as good as in cell lysates, showed no SeN metabolization. Therefore, it can be concluded that SeN may reach the brain without significant transformation.
As the third part of this work, the assessment of SeN antioxidant properties was performed in Caco-2 human colorectal adenocarcinoma cells. Previous studies demonstrated that the intestinal epithelium is able to actively transport SeN from the intestinal lumen to the blood side and accumulate SeN. Further investigation within current work showed a much higher antioxidant potential of SeN compared to ET. The radical scavenging activity after incubation with SeN was close to the one observed for selenite and selenomethionine. However, the SeN effect on the viability of intestinal cells under oxidative conditions was close to the one caused by ET. To answer the question if SeN is able to be used as a dietary Se source and induce the activity of selenoproteins, the activity of glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and the secretion of selenoprotein P (SelenoP) were measured in Caco-2 cells, additionally. As expected, reference selenium compounds selenite and selenomethionine caused efficient induction of GPx activity. In contrast to those SeN had no effect on GPx activity. To examine the possibility of SeN being embedded into the selenoproteome, SelenoP was measured in a culture medium. Even though Caco-2 cells effectively take up SeN in quantities much higher than selenite or selenomethionine, no secretion of SelenoP was observed after SeN incubation.
Summarizing, we can conclude that SeN can hardly serve as a Se source for selenoprotein synthesis. However, SeN exhibit strong antioxidative properties, which appear when sulfur in ET is exchanged by Se. Therefore, SeN is of particular interest for research not as part of Se metabolism, but important endemic dietary antioxidant.
Systemic inflammation is a hallmark of cancer cachexia. Among tumor-host interactions, the white adipose tissue (WAT) is an important contributor to inflammation as it suffers morphological reorganization and lipolysis, releasing free fatty acids (FA), bioactive lipid mediators (LM) and pro-inflammatory cytokines, which accentuate the activation of pro-inflammatory signaling pathways and the recruitment of immune cells to the tissue. This project aimed to investigate which inflammatory factors are involved in the local adipose tissue inflammation and what is the influence of such factors upon enzymes involved in FA or LM metabolism in healthy individuals (Control), weight stable gastro-intestinal cancer patients (WSC) and cachectic cancer patients (CC). The results demonstrated that the inflammatory signature of systemic inflammation is different from local adipose tissue inflammation. The systemic inflammation of the cachectic cancer patients was characterized by higher levels of circulating saturated fatty acids (SFA), tumor-necrosis-factor-α (TNF-α), interleukins IL-6, IL-8 and CRP while levels of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), especially n3-PUFAs, were lower in CC than in the other groups. In vitro and in adipose tissue explants, pro-inflammatory cytokines and SFAs were shown to increase the chemokines IL-8 and CXCL10 that were found to be augmented in adipose tissue inflammation in CC which was more profound in the visceral adipose tissue (VAT) than in subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT). Systemic inflammation was negatively associated with the expression of PUFA synthesizing enzymes, though gene and protein expression did hardly differ between groups. The effects of inflammatory factors on enzymes in the whole tissue could have been masked by differentiated modulation of the diverse cell types in the same tissue. In vitro experiments showed that the expression of FA-modifying enzymes such as desaturases and elongases in adipocytes and macrophages was regulated into opposing directions by TNF-α, IL-6, LPS or palmitate. The higher plasma concentration of the pro-resolving LM resolvin D1 in CC cannot compensate the overall inflammatory status and the results indicate that inflammatory cytokines interfere with synthesis pathways of pro-resolving LM. In summary, the data revealed a complex inter-tissue and inter-cellular crosstalk mediated by pro-inflammatory cytokines and lipid compounds enhancing inflammation in cancer cachexia by feed-forward mechanisms.
Microbiota analyses of patients suffering from various diseases suggest a beneficial role of Akkermansia muciniphila in the maintenance of health, whereas several studies in animal models of intestinal inflammation report that this organism may aggravate inflammation. Therefore, it is important to clarify under which circumstances A. muciniphila exerts negative effects in the intestine of its host.
The previously reported observation that A. muciniphila aggravates acute intestinal inflammation in the Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium infection mouse model colonized with a simplified human intestinal microbiota was investigated in this study. To unravel the underlying mechanism that led to the observed phenomenon, the time course of events following the infection was analyzed. In mice colonized with a simplified human intestinal microbiota, Salmonella infection induced clear signs of intestinal inflammation three days post infection. The inflammatory response was similar in mice colonized with A. muciniphila before Salmonella infection. These observations were independent of the time when colonization with the simplified human intestinal microbiota occurred, right after birth or only after weaning, and contradict the previous report.
To find out whether A. muciniphila influences the development of chronic intestinal inflammation in a genetically predisposed host, mono-associated interleukin-10-deficient (Il10-/-) mice, Il10-/- mice dual-associated with A. muciniphila and colitogenic Escherichia coli NC101, as well as Il10-/- mice associated with A. muciniphila and a simplified human intestinal microbiota were compared to the respective mice without A. muciniphila. The data clearly show that in these gnotobiotic Il10-/- mice, A. muciniphila neither induces intestinal inflammation itself nor modulates it after induction by a colitogenic bacterium or by a simplified human intestinal microbiota.
The experiments lead to the conclusion that the promotion of intestinal inflammation is not an intrinsic feature of this bacterium. The results of this study encourage the proposed use of A. muciniphila for the prevention or treatment of metabolic disorders.
The increasing age of worldwide population is a major contributor for the rising prevalence of major pathologies and disease, such as type 2 diabetes, mediated by massive insulin resistance and a decline in functional beta-cell mass, highly associated with an elevated incidence of obesity. Thus, the impact of aging under physiological conditions and in combination with diet-induced metabolic stress on characteristics of pancreatic islets and beta-cells, with the focus on functionality and structural integrity, were investigated in the present dissertation.
Primarily induced by malnutrition due to chronic and excess intake of high caloric diets, containing large amounts of carbohydrates and fats, obesity followed by systemic inflammation and peripheral insulin resistance occurs over time, initiating metabolic stress conditions. Elevated insulin demands initiate an adaptive response by beta-cell mass expansion due to increased proliferation, but prolonged stress conditions drive beta-cell failure and loss. Aging has been also shown to affect beta-cell functionality and morphology, in particular by proliferative limitations. However, most studies in rodents were performed under beta-cell challenging conditions, such as high-fat diet interventions. Thus, in the first part of the thesis (publication I), a characterization of age-related alterations on pancreatic islets and beta-cells was performed by using plasma samples and pancreatic tissue sections of standard diet-fed C57BL/6J wild-type mice in several age groups (2.5, 5, 10, 15 and 21 months).
Aging was accompanied by decreased but sustained islet proliferative potential as well as an induction of cellular senescence. This was associated with a progressive islet expansion to maintain normoglycemia throughout lifespan. Moreover, beta-cell function and mass were not impaired although the formation and accumulation of AGEs occurred, located predominantly in the islet vasculature, accompanied by an induction of oxidative and nitrosative (redox) stress.
The nutritional behavior throughout human lifespan; however, is not restricted to a balanced diet. This emphasizes the significance to investigate malnutrition by the intake of high-energy diets, inducing metabolic stress conditions that synergistically with aging might amplify the detrimental effects on endocrine pancreas. Using diabetes-prone NZO mice aged 7 weeks, fed a dietary regimen of carbohydrate restriction for different periods (young mice - 11 weeks, middle-aged mice - 32 weeks) followed by a carbohydrate intervention for 3 weeks, offered the opportunity to distinguish the effects of diet-induced metabolic stress in different ages on the functionality and integrity of pancreatic islets and their beta-cells (publication II, manuscript).
Interestingly, while young NZO mice exhibited massive hyperglycemia in response to diet-induced metabolic stress accompanied by beta-cell dysfunction and apoptosis, middle-aged animals revealed only moderate hyperglycemia by the maintenance of functional beta-cells. The loss of functional beta-cell mass in islets of young mice was associated with reduced expression of PDX1 transcription factor, increased endocrine AGE formation and related redox stress as well as TXNIP-dependent induction of the mitochondrial death pathway. Although the amounts of secreted insulin and the proliferative potential were comparable in both age groups, islets of middle-aged mice exhibited sustained PDX1 expression, almost regular insulin secretory function, increased capacity for cell cycle progression as well as maintained redox potential.
The results of the present thesis indicate a loss of functional beta-cell mass in young diabetes-prone NZO mice, occurring by redox imbalance and induction of apoptotic signaling pathways. In contrast, aging under physiological conditions in C57BL/6J mice and in combination with diet-induced metabolic stress in NZO mice does not appear to have adverse effects on the functionality and structural integrity of pancreatic islets and beta-cells, associated with adaptive responses on changing metabolic demands. However, considering the detrimental effects of aging, it has to be assumed that the compensatory potential of mice might be exhausted at a later point of time, finally leading to a loss of functional beta-cell mass and the onset and progression of type 2 diabetes.
The polygenic, diabetes-prone NZO mouse is a suitable model for the investigation of human obesity-associated type 2 diabetes. However, mice at advanced age attenuated the diabetic phenotype or do not respond to the dietary stimuli. This might be explained by the middle age of mice, corresponding to the human age of about 38-40 years, in which the compensatory mechanisms of pancreatic islets and beta cells towards metabolic stress conditions are presumably more active.
The development of type 2 diabetes (T2D) is driven by genetic as well as life style factors. However, even genetically identical female NZO mice on a high-fat diet show a broad variation in T2D onset. The main objective of this study was to elucidate and investigate early epigenetic determinants of type 2 diabetes. Prior to other experiments, early fat content of the liver (<55.2 HU) in combination with blood glucose concentrations (>8.8 mM) were evaluated as best predictors of diabetes in NZO females. Then, DNA methylome and transcriptome were profiled to identify molecular pathophysiological changes in the liver before diabetes onset. The major finding of this thesis is that alterations in the hepatic DNA methylome precede diabetes onset. Of particular interest were 702 differentially methylated regions (DMRs), of which 506 DMRs had genic localization. These inter-individual DMRs were enriched by fivefold in the KEGG pathway type 2 diabetes mellitus, independent of the level of gene expression, demonstrating an epigenetic predisposition toward diabetes. Interestingly, among the list of hepatic DMRs, eleven DMRs were associated with known imprinted genes in the mouse genome. Thereby, six DMRs (Nap1l5, Mest, Plagl1, Gnas, Grb10 and Slc38a4) localized to imprinting control regions, including five iDMRs that exhibited hypermethylation in livers of diabetes-prone mice. This suggests that gain of DNA methylation in multiple loci of the paternal alleles has unfavourable metabolic consequences for the offspring. Further, the comparative liver transcriptome analysis demonstrated differences in expression levels of 1492 genes related to metabolically relevant pathways, such as citrate cycle and fatty acid metabolism. The integration of hepatic transcriptome and DNA methylome indicated that 449 differentially expressed genes were potentially regulated by DNA methylation, including genes implicated in insulin signaling. In addition, liver transcriptomic profiling of diabetes-resistant and diabetes-prone mice revealed a potential transcriptional dysregulation of 17 hepatokines, in particular Hamp. The hepatic expression of Hamp was decreased by 52% in diabetes-prone mice, on account of an increase in DNA methylation of promoter CpG-118. Hence, HAMP protein levels were lower in mice prone to develop diabetes, which correlated to higher liver triglyceride levels.. In sum, the identified DNA methylation changes appear to collectively favor the initiation and progression of diabetes in female NZO mice. In near future, epigenetic biomarkers are likely to contribute to improved diagnosis for T2D.
Aging is a complex process characterized by several factors, including loss of genetic and epigenetic information, accumulation of chronic oxidative stress, protein damage and aggregates and it is becoming an emergent drug target. Therefore, it is the utmost importance to study aging and agerelated diseases, to provide treatments to develop a healthy aging process. Skeletal muscle is one of the earliest tissues affected by age-related changes with progressive loss of muscle mass and function from 30 years old, effect known as sarcopenia. Several studies have shown the accumulation of protein aggregates in different animal models, as well as in humans, suggesting impaired proteostasis, a hallmark of aging, especially regarding degradation systems. Thus, different publications have explored the role of the main proteolytic systems in skeletal muscle from rodents and humans, like ubiquitin proteasomal system (UPS) and autophagy lysosomal system (ALS), however with contradictory results. Yet, most of the published studies are performed in muscles that comprise more than one fiber type, that means, muscles composed by slow and fast fibers. These fiber types, exhibit different metabolism and contraction speed; the slow fibers or type I display an oxidative metabolism, while fast fibers function towards a glycolytic metabolism ranging from fast oxidative to fast glycolytic fibers. To this extent, the aim of this thesis sought to understand on how aging impacts both fiber types not only regarding proteostasis but also at a metabolome and transcriptome network levels. Therefore, the first part of this thesis, presents the differences between slow oxidative (from Soleus muscle) and fast glycolytic fibers (Extensor digitorum longus, EDL) in terms of degradation systems and how they cope with oxidative stress during aging, while the second part explores the differences between young and old EDL muscle transcriptome and metabolome, unraveling molecular features. More specifically, the results from the present work show that slow oxidative muscle performs better at maintaining the function of UPS and ALS during aging than EDL muscle, which is clearly affected, accounting for the decline in the catalytic activity rates and accumulation of autophagy-related proteins. Strinkingly, transcriptome and metabolome analyses reveal that fast glycolytic muscle evidences significant downregulation of mitochondrial related processes and damaged mitochondria morphology during aging, despite of having a lower oxidative metabolism compared to oxidative fibers. Moreover, predictive analyses reveal a negative association between aged EDL gene signature and lifespan extending interventions such as caloric restriction (CR). Although, CR intervention does not alter the levels of mitochondrial markers in aged EDL muscle, it can reverse the higher mRNA levels of muscle damage markers. Together, the results from this thesis give new insights about how different metabolic muscle fibers cope with age-related changes and why fast glycolytic fibers are more susceptible to aging than slow oxidative fibers.
Ghrelin is a unique hunger-inducing stomach-borne hormone. It activates orexigenic circuits in the central nervous system (CNS) when acylated with a fatty acid residue by the Ghrelin O-acyltransferase (GOAT). Soon after the discovery of ghrelin a theoretical model emerged which suggests that the gastric peptide ghrelin is the first “meal initiation molecule
Aging is associated with bone loss, which can lead to osteoporosis and high fracture risk. This coincides with the enhanced formation of bone marrow adipose tissue (BMAT), suggesting a negative effect of bone marrow adipocytes on skeletal health. Increased BMAT formation is also observed in pathologies such as obesity, type 2 diabetes and osteoporosis. However, a subset of bone marrow adipocytes forming the constitutive BMAT (cBMAT), arise early in life in the distal skeleton, contain high levels of unsaturated fatty acids and are thought to provide a physiological function. Regulated BMAT (rBMAT) forms during aging and obesity in proximal regions of the bone and contain a large proportion of saturated fatty acids. Paradoxically, BMAT accumulation is also enhanced during caloric restriction (CR), a life-span extending dietary intervention. This indicates, that different types of BMAT can form in response to opposing nutritional stimuli with potentially different functions.
To this end, two types of nutritional interventions, CR and high fat diet (HFD), that are both described to induce BMAT accumulation were carried out. CR markedly increased BMAT formation in the proximal tibia and led to a higher proportion of unsaturated fatty acids, making it similar to the physiological cBMAT. Additionally, proximal and diaphyseal tibia regions displayed higher adiponectin expression. In aged mice, CR was associated with an improved trabecular bone structure. Taken together, these findings demonstrate, that the type of BMAT that forms during CR might provide beneficial effects for local bone stem/progenitor cells and metabolic health. The HFD intervention performed in this thesis showed no effect on BMAT accumulation and bone microstructure. RNA Seq analysis revealed alterations in the composition of the collagen-containing extracellular matrix (ECM).
In order to investigate the effects of glucose homeostasis on osteogenesis, differentiation capacity of immortalized multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) and osteochondrogenic progenitor cells (OPCs) was analyzed. Insulin improved differentiation in both cell types, however, combination of with a high glucose concentration led to an impaired mineralization of the ECM. In the MSCs, this was accompanied by the formation of adipocytes, indicating negative effects of the adipocytes formed during hyperglycemic conditions on mineralization processes. However, the altered mineralization pattern and structure of the ECM was also observed in OPCs, which did not form any adipocytes, suggesting further negative effects of a hyperglycemic environment on osteogenic differentiation.
In summary, the work provided in this thesis demonstrated that differentiation commitment of bone-resident stem cells can be altered through nutrient availability, specifically glucose. Surprisingly, both high nutrient supply, e.g. the hyperglycemic cell culture conditions, and low nutrient supply, e.g. CR, can induce adipogenic differentiation. However, while CR-induced adipocyte formation was associated with improved trabecular bone structure, adipocyte formation in a hyperglycemic cell-culture environment hampered mineralization. This thesis provides further evidence for the existence of different types of BMAT with specific functions.
Protected cultivation in greenhouses or polytunnels offers the potential for sustainable production of high-yield, high-quality vegetables. This is related to the ability to produce more on less land and to use resources responsibly and efficiently. Crop yield has long been considered the most important factor. However, as plant-based diets have been proposed for a sustainable food system, the targeted enrichment of health-promoting plant secondary metabolites should be addressed. These metabolites include carotenoids and flavonoids, which are associated with several health benefits, such as cardiovascular health and cancer protection.
Cover materials generally have an influence on the climatic conditions, which in turn can affect the levels of secondary metabolites in vegetables grown underneath. Plastic materials are cost-effective and their properties can be modified by incorporating additives, making them the first choice. However, these additives can migrate and leach from the material, resulting in reduced service life, increased waste and possible environmental release. Antifogging additives are used in agricultural films to prevent the formation of droplets on the film surface, thereby increasing light transmission and preventing microbiological contamination.
This thesis focuses on LDPE/EVA covers and incorporated antifogging additives for sustainable protected cultivation, following two different approaches. The first addressed the direct effects of leached antifogging additives using simulation studies on lettuce leaves (Lactuca sativa var capitata L). The second determined the effect of antifog polytunnel covers on lettuce quality. Lettuce is usually grown under protective cover and can provide high nutritional value due to its carotenoid and flavonoid content, depending on the cultivar.
To study the influence of simulated leached antifogging additives on lettuce leaves, a GC-MS method was first developed to analyze these additives based on their fatty acid moieties. Three structurally different antifogging additives (reference material) were characterized outside of a polymer matrix for the first time. All of them contained more than the main fatty acid specified by the manufacturer. Furthermore, they were found to adhere to the leaf surface and could not be removed by water or partially by hexane.
The incorporation of these additives into polytunnel covers affects carotenoid levels in lettuce, but not flavonoids, caffeic acid derivatives and chlorophylls. Specifically, carotenoids were higher in lettuce grown under polytunnels without antifog than with antifog. This has been linked to their effect on the light regime and was suggested to be related to carotenoid function in photosynthesis.
In terms of protected cultivation, the use of LDPE/EVA polytunnels affected light and temperature, and both are closely related. The carotenoid and flavonoid contents of lettuce grown under polytunnels was reversed, with higher carotenoid and lower flavonoid levels. At the individual level, the flavonoids detected in lettuce did not differ however, lettuce carotenoids adapted specifically depending on the time of cultivation. Flavonoid reduction was shown to be transcriptionally regulated (CHS) in response to UV light (UVR8). In contrast, carotenoids are thought to be regulated post-transcriptionally, as indicated by the lack of correlation between carotenoid levels and transcripts of the first enzyme in carotenoid biosynthesis (PSY) and a carotenoid degrading enzyme (CCD4), as well as the increased carotenoid metabolic flux. Understanding the regulatory mechanisms and metabolite adaptation strategies could further advance the strategic development and selection of cover materials.
Sex-specific differences in the regulation of body weight dynamics and adipose tissue metabolism
(2014)
Growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) is a stress-induced cytokine secreted into the circulation by a number of tissues under different pathological conditions such as cardiovascular disease, cancer or mitochondrial dysfunction, among others. While GDF15 signaling through its recently identified hindbrain-specific receptor GDNF family receptor alpha-like (GFRAL) has been proposed to be involved in the metabolic stress response, its endocrine role under chronic stress conditions is still poorly understood. Mitochondrial dysfunction is characterized by the impairment of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS), leading to inefficient functioning of mitochondria and consequently, to mitochondrial stress. Importantly, mitochondrial dysfunction is among the pathologies to most robustly induce GDF15 as a cytokine in the circulation.
The overall aim of this thesis was to elucidate the role of the GDF15-GFRAL pathway under mitochondrial stress conditions. For this purpose, a mouse model of skeletal muscle-specific mitochondrial stress achieved by ectopic expression of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1), the HSA-Ucp1-transgenic (TG) mouse, was employed. As a consequence of mitochondrial stress, TG mice display a metabolic remodeling consisting of a lean phenotype, an improved glucose metabolism, an increased metabolic flexibility and a metabolic activation of white adipose tissue.
Making use of TG mice crossed with whole body Gdf15-knockout (GdKO) and Gfral-knockout (GfKO) mouse models, this thesis demonstrates that skeletal muscle mitochondrial stress induces the integrated stress response (ISR) and GDF15 in skeletal muscle, which is released into the circulation as a myokine (muscle-induced cytokine) in a circadian manner. Further, this work identifies GDF15-GFRAL signaling to be responsible for the systemic metabolic remodeling elicited by mitochondrial stress in TG mice. Moreover, this study reveals a daytime-restricted anorexia induced by the GDF15-GFRAL axis under muscle mitochondrial stress, which is, mechanistically, mediated through the induction of hypothalamic corticotropin releasing hormone (CRH). Finally, this work elucidates a so far unknown physiological outcome of the GDF15-GFRAL pathway: the induction of anxiety-like behavior.
In conclusion, this study uncovers a muscle-brain crosstalk under skeletal muscle mitochondrial stress conditions through the induction of GDF15 as a myokine that signals through the hindbrain-specific GFRAL receptor to elicit a stress response leading to metabolic remodeling and modulation of ingestive- and anxiety-like behavior.
Over the last decades, interest in the impact of the intestinal microbiota on host health has steadily increased. Diet is a major factor that influences the gut microbiota and thereby indirectly affects human health. For example, a high fat diet rich in saturated fatty acids led to an intestinal proliferation of the colitogenic bacterium Bilophila (B.) wadsworthia by stimulating the release of the bile acid taurocholate (TC). TC contains the sulfonated head group taurine, which undergoes conversion to sulfide (H2S) by B. wadsworthia. In a colitis prone murine animal model (IL10 / mice), the bloom of B. wadsworthia was accompanied by an exacerbation of intestinal inflammation. B. wadsworthia is able to convert taurine and also other sulfonates to H2S, indicating the potential association of sulfonate utilization and the stimulation of colitogenic bacteria.
This potential link raised the question, whether dietary sulfonates or their sulfonated metabolites stimulate the growth of colitogenic bacteria such as B. wadsworthia and whether these bacteria convert sulfonates to H2S. Besides taurine, which is present in meat, fish and life-style beverages, other dietary sulfonates are part of daily human nutrition. Sulfolipids such as sulfoquinovosyldiacylglycerols (SQDG) are highly abundant in salad, parsley and the cyanobacterium Arthrospira platensis (Spirulina). Based on previous findings, Escherichia (E.) coli releases the polar headgroup sulfoquinovose (SQ) from SQDG. Moreover, E. coli is able to convert SQ to 2,3 dihydroxypropane 1 sulfonate (DHPS) under anoxic conditions. DHPS is also converted to H2S by B. wadsworthia or by other potentially harmful gut bacteria such as members of the genus Desulfovibrio. However, only few studies report the conversion of sulfonates to H2S by bacteria directly isolated from the human intestinal tract. Most sulfonate utilizing bacteria were obtained from environmental sources such as soil or lake sediment or from potentially intestinal sources such as sewage.
In the present study, fecal slurries from healthy human subjects were incubated with sulfonates under strictly anoxic conditions, using formate and lactate as electron donors. Fecal slurries that converted sulfonates to H2S, were used as a source for the isolation of H2S forming bacteria. Isolates were identified based on their 16S ribosomal RNA (16S rRNA) gene sequence. In addition, conventional C57BL/6 mice were fed a semisynthetic diet supplemented with the SQDG rich Spirulina (SD) or a Spirulina free control diet (CD). During the intervention, body weight, water and food intake were monitored and fecal samples were collected. After three weeks, mice were killed and organ weight and size were measured, intestinal sulfonate concentrations were quantified, gut microbiota composition was determined and parameters of intestinal and hepatic fat metabolism were analyzed.
Human fecal slurries converted taurine, isethionate, cysteate, 3 sulfolacate, SQ and DHPS to H2S. However, inter individual differences in the degradation of these sulfonates were observed. Taurine, isethionate, and 3 sulfolactate were utilized by fecal microbiota of all donors, while SQ, DHPS and cysteate were converted to H2S only by microbiota from certain individuals. Bacterial isolates from human feces able to convert sulfonates to H2S were identified as taurine-utilizing Desulfovibrio strains, taurine- and isethionate-utilizing B. wadsworthia, or as SQ- and 3-sulfolactate- utilizing E. coli. In addition, a co culture of E. coli and B. wadsworthia led to complete degradation of SQ to H2S, with DHPS as an intermediate. Of the human fecal isolates, B. wadsworthia and Desulfovibrio are potentially harmful. E. coli strains might be also pathogenic, but isolated E. coli strains from human feces were identified as commensal gut bacteria.
Feeding SD to mice increased the cecal and fecal SQ concentration and altered the microbiota composition, but the relative abundance of SQDG or SQ converting bacteria and colitogenic bacteria was not enriched in mice fed SD for 21 days. SD did not affect the relative abundance of Enterobacteriaceae, to which the SQDG- and SQ-utilizing E. coli strain belong to. Furthermore, the abundance of B. wadsworthia decreased from day 2 to day 9 in feces, but recovered afterwards in the same mice. In cecum, the family Desulfovibrionaceae, to which B. wadsworthia and Desulfovibrio belong to, were reduced. No changes in the number of B. wadsworthia in cecal contents or of Desulfovibrionaceae in feces were observed. SD led to a mild activation of the immune system, which was not observed in control mice fed CD. Mice fed SD had an increased body weight, a higher adipose tissue weight, and a decreased liver weight compared to the control mice, suggesting an impact of Spirulina supplementation on fat metabolism. However, expression levels of genes involved in intestinal and hepatic intracellular lipid uptake and availability were reduced. Further investigations on the lipid metabolism at protein level could help to clarify these discrepancies.
In summary, humans differ in the ability of their fecal microbiota to utilize dietary sulfonates. While sulfonates stimulated the proliferation of potentially colitogenic isolates from human fecal slurries, the increased availability of SQ in Spirulina fed conventional mice did not lead to an enrichment of such bacteria. Presence or absence of these bacteria may explain the inter individual differences in sulfonate conversion observed for fecal slurries. This work provides new insights in the ability of intestinal bacteria to utilize sulfonates and thus, contributes to a better understanding of microbiota-mediated effects on dietary sulfonate utilization. Interestingly, feeding of the Spirulina-supplemented diet led to body-weight gain in mice in the first two days of intervention, the reasons for which are unknown.
Role of dietary sulfonates in the stimulation of gut bacteria promoting intestinal inflammation
(2021)
The interplay between intestinal microbiota and host has increasingly been recognized as a major factor impacting health. Studies indicate that diet is the most influential determinant affecting the gut microbiota. A diet rich in saturated fat was shown to stimulate the growth of the colitogenic bacterium Bilophila wadsworthia by enhancing the secretion of the bile acid taurocholate (TC). The sulfonated taurine moiety of TC is utilized as a substrate by B. wadsworthia. The resulting overgrowth of B. wadsworthia was accompanied by an increased incidence and severity of colitis in interleukin (IL)-10-deficient mice, which are genetically prone to develop inflammation.
Based on these findings, the question arose whether the intake of dietary sulfonates also stimulates the growth of B. wadsworthia and thereby promotes intestinal inflammation in genetically susceptible mice. Dietary sources of sulfonates include green vegetables and cyanobacteria, which contain the sulfolipids sulfoquinovosyl diacylglycerols (SQDG) in considerable amounts. Based on literature reports, the gut commensal Escherichia coli is able to release sulfoquinovose (SQ) from SQDG and in further steps, convert SQ to 2,3-dihydroxypropane-1-sulfonate (DHPS) and dihydroxyacetone phosphate. DHPS may then be utilized as a growth substrate by B. wadsworthia, which results in the formation of sulfide. Both, sulfide formation and a high abundance of B. wadsworthia have been associated with intestinal inflammation.
In the present study, conventional IL-10-deficient mice were fed either a diet supplemented with the SQDG-rich cyanobacterium Spirulina (20%, SD) or a control diet. In addition SQ, TC, or water were orally applied to conventional or gnotobiotic IL-10-deficient mice. The gnotobiotic mice harbored a simplified human intestinal microbiota (SIHUMI) either with or without B. wadsworthia. During the intervention period, the body weight of the mice was monitored, the colon permeability was assessed and fecal samples were collected. After the three-week intervention, the animals were examined with regard to inflammatory parameters, microbiota composition and sulfonate concentrations in different intestinal sites.
None of the mice treated with the above-mentioned sulfonates showed weight loss or intestinal inflammation. Solely mice fed SD or gavaged with TC displayed a slight immune response. These mice also displayed an altered microbiota composition, which was not observed in mice gavaged with SQ. The abundance of B. wadsworthia was strongly reduced in mice fed SD, while that of mice treated with SQ or TC was in part slightly increased. The intestinal SQ-concentration was elevated in mice orally treated with SD or SQ, whereas neither TC nor taurine concentrations were consistently elevated in mice gavaged with TC. Additional colonization of SIHUMI mice with B. wadsworthia resulted in a mild inflammatory response, but only in mice treated with TC. In general, TC-mediated effects on the immune system and abundance of B. wadsworthia were not as strong as described in the literature.
In summary, neither the tested dietary sulfonates nor TC led to bacteria-induced intestinal inflammation in the IL-10-deficient mouse model, which was consistently observed in both conventional and gnotobiotic mice. For humans, this means that foods containing SQDG, such as spinach or Spirulina, do not increase the risk of intestinal inflammation.
Diet is a major force influencing the intestinal microbiota. This is obvious from drastic changes in microbiota composition after a dietary alteration. Due to the complexity of the commensal microbiota and the high inter-individual variability, little is known about the bacterial response at the cellular level. The objective of this work was to identify mechanisms that enable gut bacteria to adapt to dietary factors. For this purpose, germ-free mice monoassociated with the commensal Escherichia coli K-12 strain MG1655 were fed three different diets over three weeks: a diet rich in starch, a diet rich in non-digestible lactose and a diet rich in casein. Two dimensional gel electrophoresis and electrospray tandem mass spectrometry were applied to identify differentially expressed proteins of E. coli recovered from small intestine and caecum of mice fed the lactose or casein diets in comparison with those of mice fed the starch diet. Selected differentially expressed bacterial proteins were characterised in vitro for their possible roles in bacterial adaptation to the various diets. Proteins belonging to the oxidative stress regulon oxyR such as alkyl hydroperoxide reductase subunit F (AhpF), DNA protection during starvation protein (Dps) and ferric uptake regulatory protein (Fur), which are required for E. coli’s oxidative stress response, were upregulated in E. coli of mice fed the lactose-rich diet. Reporter gene analysis revealed that not only oxidative stress but also carbohydrate-induced osmotic stress led to the OxyR-dependent expression of ahpCF and dps. Moreover, the growth of E. coli mutants lacking the ahpCF or oxyR genes was impaired in the presence of non-digestible sucrose. This indicates that some OxyR-dependent proteins are crucial for the adaptation of E. coli to osmotic stress conditions. In addition, the function of two so far poorly characterised E. coli proteins was analysed: 2 deoxy-D gluconate 3 dehydrogenase (KduD) was upregulated in intestinal E. coli of mice fed the lactose-rich diet and this enzyme and 5 keto 4 deoxyuronate isomerase (KduI) were downregulated on the casein-rich diet. Reporter gene analysis identified galacturonate and glucuronate as inducers of the kduD and kduI gene expression. Moreover, KduI was shown to facilitate the breakdown of these hexuronates, which are normally degraded by uronate isomerase (UxaC), altronate oxidoreductase (UxaB), altronate dehydratase (UxaA), mannonate oxidoreductase (UxuB) and mannonate dehydratase (UxuA), whose expression was repressed by osmotic stress. The growth of kduID-deficient E. coli on galacturonate or glucuronate was impaired in the presence of osmotic stress, suggesting KduI and KduD to compensate for the function of the regular hexuronate degrading enzymes under such conditions. This indicates a novel function of KduI and KduD in E. coli’s hexuronate metabolism. Promotion of the intracellular formation of hexuronates by lactose connects these in vitro observations with the induction of KduD on the lactose-rich diet. Taken together, this study demonstrates the crucial influence of osmotic stress on the gene expression of E. coli enzymes involved in stress response and metabolic processes. Therefore, the adaptation to diet-induced osmotic stress is a possible key factor for bacterial colonisation of the intestinal environment.