Effects of the gut microbiota on host adiposity are modulated by the short-chain fatty-acid binding G protein-coupled receptor, Gpr41

Buck S. Samuel(Washington University in St. Louis), Abdullah Shaito(Institute of Molecular Biology and Biophysics), Toshiyuki Motoike(Japan Science and Technology Agency), Federico E. Rey, Fredrik Bäckhed(Washington University in St. Louis), Jill K. Manchester, Robert E. Hammer(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), S. Clay Williams(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Jan R. Crowley(Washington University in St. Louis), Masashi Yanagisawa(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Jeffrey I. Gordon
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
October 18, 2008
Cited by 1,544Open Access
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Abstract

The distal human intestine harbors trillions of microbes that allow us to extract calories from otherwise indigestible dietary polysaccharides. The products of polysaccharide fermentation include short-chain fatty acids that are ligands for Gpr41, a G protein-coupled receptor expressed by a subset of enteroendocrine cells in the gut epithelium. To examine the contribution of Gpr41 to energy balance, we compared Gpr41-/- and Gpr41+/+ mice that were either conventionally-raised with a complete gut microbiota or were reared germ-free and then cocolonized as young adults with two prominent members of the human distal gut microbial community: the saccharolytic bacterium, Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron and the methanogenic archaeon, Methanobrevibacter smithii. Both conventionally-raised and gnotobiotic Gpr41-/- mice colonized with the model fermentative community are significantly leaner and weigh less than their WT (+/+) littermates, despite similar levels of chow consumption. These differences are not evident when germ-free WT and germ-free Gpr41 knockout animals are compared. Functional genomic, biochemical, and physiologic studies of germ-free and cocolonized Gpr41-/- and +/+ littermates disclosed that Gpr41-deficiency is associated with reduced expression of PYY, an enteroendocrine cell-derived hormone that normally inhibits gut motility, increased intestinal transit rate, and reduced harvest of energy (short-chain fatty acids) from the diet. These results reveal that Gpr41 is a regulator of host energy balance through effects that are dependent upon the gut microbiota.


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