[PDF][PDF] A forward chemical genetic screen reveals gut microbiota metabolites that modulate host physiology

H Chen, PK Nwe, Y Yang, CE Rosen, AA Bielecka… - Cell, 2019 - cell.com
H Chen, PK Nwe, Y Yang, CE Rosen, AA Bielecka, M Kuchroo, GW Cline, AC Kruse
Cell, 2019cell.com
The intestinal microbiota produces tens of thousands of metabolites. Here, we used host
sensing of small molecules by G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) as a lens to illuminate
bioactive microbial metabolites that impact host physiology. We screened 144 human gut
bacteria against the non-olfactory GPCRome and identified dozens of bacteria that activated
both well-characterized and orphan GPCRs, including strains that converted dietary
histidine into histamine and shaped colonic motility; a prolific producer of the essential …
Summary
The intestinal microbiota produces tens of thousands of metabolites. Here, we used host sensing of small molecules by G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) as a lens to illuminate bioactive microbial metabolites that impact host physiology. We screened 144 human gut bacteria against the non-olfactory GPCRome and identified dozens of bacteria that activated both well-characterized and orphan GPCRs, including strains that converted dietary histidine into histamine and shaped colonic motility; a prolific producer of the essential amino acid L-Phe, which we identified as an agonist for GPR56 and GPR97; and a species that converted L-Phe into the potent psychoactive trace amine phenethylamine, which crosses the blood-brain barrier and triggers lethal phenethylamine poisoning after monoamine oxidase inhibitor administration. These studies establish an orthogonal approach for parsing the microbiota metabolome and uncover multiple biologically relevant host-microbiota metabolome interactions.
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