Aberrant gut microbiota alters host metabolome and impacts renal failure in humans and rodents

Xifan Wang(China Agricultural University), Songtao Yang(Aerospace Center Hospital), Shenghui Li, Liang Zhao(China Agricultural University), Yanling Hao(China Agricultural University), Junjie Qin, Lian Zhang(Peking University), Chengying Zhang(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Weijing Bian(Capital University), Li Zuo(Peking University), Xiu Kun Gao(Peking University Shougang Hospital), Baoli Zhu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xin Gen Lei(Cornell University), Zhenglong Gu(Cornell University), Wei Cui(Imperial College London), Xiping Xu(Nanfang Hospital), Zhiming Li, Benzhong Zhu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yuan Li(China Agricultural University), Shangwu Chen(China Agricultural University), Huiyuan Guo(China Agricultural University), Hao Zhang(China Agricultural University), Jing Sun(University of Copenhagen), Ming Zhang(Beijing Technology and Business University), Hui Yan(China Agricultural University), Xiaolin Zhang(China Agricultural University), Xiaoxue Liu(China Agricultural University), Bowen Sun(China Agricultural University), Longjiao Wang(China Agricultural University), Qinglu Qiu(China Agricultural University), Yuchan Zhang(China Agricultural University), Xingqi Li(China Agricultural University), Weiqian Liu(China Agricultural University), Rui Xue(Shanghai Model Organisms (China)), Hong Wu(Aerospace Center Hospital), Donghua Shao(Aerospace Center Hospital), Junling Li(Peking University Shougang Hospital), Yuanjie Zhou, Shaochuan Li, Rentao Yang, Oluf Pedersen(University of Copenhagen), Zhengquan Yu(Agrobiotechnology Institute), S. Dusko Ehrlich(King's College London), Fazheng Ren(China Agricultural University)
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Abstract

Objective Patients with renal failure suffer from symptoms caused by uraemic toxins, possibly of gut microbial origin, as deduced from studies in animals. The aim of the study is to characterise relationships between the intestinal microbiome composition, uraemic toxins and renal failure symptoms in human end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Design Characterisation of gut microbiome, serum and faecal metabolome and human phenotypes in a cohort of 223 patients with ESRD and 69 healthy controls. Multidimensional data integration to reveal links between these datasets and the use of chronic kidney disease (CKD) rodent models to test the effects of intestinal microbiome on toxin accumulation and disease severity. Results A group of microbial species enriched in ESRD correlates tightly to patient clinical variables and encode functions involved in toxin and secondary bile acids synthesis; the relative abundance of the microbial functions correlates with the serum or faecal concentrations of these metabolites. Microbiota from patients transplanted to renal injured germ-free mice or antibiotic-treated rats induce higher production of serum uraemic toxins and aggravated renal fibrosis and oxidative stress more than microbiota from controls. Two of the species, Eggerthella lenta and Fusobacterium nucleatum , increase uraemic toxins production and promote renal disease development in a CKD rat model. A probiotic Bifidobacterium animalis decreases abundance of these species, reduces levels of toxins and the severity of the disease in rats. Conclusion Aberrant gut microbiota in patients with ESRD sculpts a detrimental metabolome aggravating clinical outcomes, suggesting that the gut microbiota will be a promising target for diminishing uraemic toxicity in those patients. Trial registration number This study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov ( NCT03010696 ).


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