Epigenetic effects of short-chain fatty acids from the large intestine on host cells.

microLife Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1093/femsml/uqad032
Richard A Stein, Leise Riber
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Adult humans harbor at least as many microbial cells as eukaryotic ones. The largest compartment of this diverse microbial population, the gut microbiota, encompasses the collection of bacteria, archaea, viruses, and eukaryotic organisms that populate the gastrointestinal tract, and represents a complex and dynamic ecosystem that has been increasingly implicated in health and disease. The gut microbiota carries ∼100-to-150-times more genes than the human genome and is intimately involved in development, homeostasis, and disease. Of the several microbial metabolites that have been studied, short-chain fatty acids emerge as a group of molecules that shape gene expression in several types of eukaryotic cells by multiple mechanisms, which include DNA methylation changes, histone post-translational modifications, and microRNA-mediated gene silencing. Butyric acid, one of the most extensively studied short-chain fatty acids, reaches higher concentrations in the colonic lumen, where it provides a source of energy for healthy colonocytes, and its concentrations decrease towards the bottom of the colonic crypts, where stem cells reside. The lower butyric acid concentration in the colonic crypts allows undifferentiated cells, such as stem cells, to progress through the cell cycle, pointing towards the importance of the crypts in providing them with a protective niche. In cancerous colonocytes, which metabolize relatively little butyric acid and mostly rely on glycolysis, butyric acid preferentially acts as a histone deacetylase inhibitor, leading to decreased cell proliferation and increased apoptosis. A better understanding of the interface between the gut microbiota metabolites and epigenetic changes in eukaryotic cells promises to unravel in more detail processes that occur physiologically and as part of disease, help develop novel biomarkers, and identify new therapeutic modalities.

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大肠短链脂肪酸对宿主细胞的表观遗传影响。
成年人体内的微生物细胞至少和真核细胞一样多。肠道菌群是这一多样化微生物种群中最大的一个区室,它包括了胃肠道中的细菌、古生菌、病毒和真核生物,代表了一个复杂而动态的生态系统,与健康和疾病的关系日益密切。肠道微生物群携带的基因比人类基因组多100到150倍,与发育、体内平衡和疾病密切相关。在已被研究的几种微生物代谢物中,短链脂肪酸作为一组分子通过多种机制在几种真核细胞中塑造基因表达,包括DNA甲基化改变、组蛋白翻译后修饰和microrna介导的基因沉默。丁酸是研究最广泛的短链脂肪酸之一,在结肠腔中浓度较高,为健康的结肠细胞提供能量来源,而在结肠隐窝底部,丁酸的浓度降低,而结肠隐窝是干细胞所在的地方。结肠隐窝中较低的丁酸浓度允许未分化的细胞,如干细胞,在细胞周期中进展,指出隐窝在为它们提供保护生态位方面的重要性。在癌性结肠细胞中,丁酸代谢相对较少,主要依赖于糖酵解,丁酸优先作为组蛋白去乙酰化酶抑制剂,导致细胞增殖下降和细胞凋亡增加。更好地了解肠道微生物群代谢物和真核细胞表观遗传变化之间的界面有望揭示更详细的生理过程和作为疾病的一部分,有助于开发新的生物标志物,并确定新的治疗方式。
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