Mammals sustain amino acid homochirality against chiral conversion by symbiotic microbes

Author:

Gonda Yusuke12,Matsuda Akina13,Adachi Kenichiro1,Ishii Chiharu4,Suzuki Masataka1,Osaki Akina1,Mita Masashi5,Nishizaki Naoto2,Ohtomo Yoshiyuki6,Shimizu Toshiaki3ORCID,Yasui Masato1,Hamase Kenji4,Sasabe Jumpei1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology, Keio University School of Medicine, 160-8582 Tokyo, Japan

2. Department of Pediatrics, Juntendo University Urayasu Hospital, 279-0021 Chiba, Japan

3. Department of Pediatrics, Juntendo University Faculty of Medicine, 113-8431 Tokyo, Japan

4. Department of Drug Discovery and Evolution, Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kyushu University, 812-8582 Fukuoka, Japan

5. KAGAMI Inc., Osaka 567-0005, Japan

6. Department of Pediatrics, Juntendo University Nerima Hospital, 177-8521 Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

Mammals exhibit systemic homochirality of amino acids in L -configurations. While ribosomal protein synthesis requires rigorous chiral selection for L -amino acids, both endogenous and microbial enzymes convert diverse L -amino acids to D -configurations in mammals. However, it is not clear how mammals manage such diverse D -enantiomers. Here, we show that mammals sustain systemic stereo dominance of L -amino acids through both enzymatic degradation and excretion of D -amino acids. Multidimensional high performance liquidchromatography analyses revealed that in blood, humans and mice maintain D -amino acids at less than several percent of the corresponding L -enantiomers, while D -amino acids comprise ten to fifty percent of the L -enantiomers in urine and feces. Germ-free experiments showed that vast majority of D -amino acids, except for D -serine, detected in mice are of microbial origin. Experiments involving mice that lack enzymatic activity to catabolize D -amino acids showed that catabolism is central to the elimination of diverse microbial D -amino acids, whereas excretion into urine is of minor importance under physiological conditions. Such active regulation of amino acid homochirality depends on maternal catabolism during the prenatal period, which switches developmentally to juvenile catabolism along with the growth of symbiotic microbes after birth. Thus, microbial symbiosis largely disturbs homochirality of amino acids in mice, whereas active host catabolism of microbial D -amino acids maintains systemic predominance of L -amino acids. Our findings provide fundamental insight into how the chiral balance of amino acids is governed in mammals and further expand the understanding of interdomain molecular homeostasis in host-microbial symbiosis.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

MEXT | Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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