Microbial Tryptophan Metabolites Ameliorate Ovariectomy‐Induced Bone Loss by Repairing Intestinal AhR‐Mediated Gut‐Bone Signaling Pathway

Author:

Chen Chuan12,Cao Zheng12,Lei Hehua12,Zhang Cui12,Wu Mengjing12,Huang Shaohua3,Li Xinzhi4,Xie Denghui5,Liu Maili12,Zhang Limin12ORCID,Chen Gang6

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Magnetic Resonance and Imaging National Centre for Magnetic Resonance in Wuhan Innovation Academy of Precision Measurement Science and Technology CAS Wuhan 430071 China

2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100049 China

3. Institute of Drug Discovery and Technology Ningbo University Ningbo 315211 China

4. School of Pharmacy and State Key Laboratory of Quality Research in Chinese Medicine Macau University of Science and Technology Macau 999078 China

5. Department of Joint Surgery Center for Orthopaedic Surgery The Third Affiliated Hospital of Southern Medical University Guangzhou 510515 China

6. Department of Geriatrics Hubei Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine (Affiliated Hospital of Hubei University of Chinese Medicine) Wuhan 430060 China

Abstract

AbstractMicrobial tryptophan (Trp) metabolites acting as aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) ligands are shown to effectively improve metabolic diseases via regulating microbial community. However, the underlying mechanisms by which Trp metabolites ameliorate bone loss via gut‐bone crosstalk are largely unknown. In this study, supplementation with Trp metabolites, indole acetic acid (IAA), and indole‐3‐propionic acid (IPA), markedly ameliorate bone loss by repairing intestinal barrier integrity in ovariectomy (OVX)‐induced postmenopausal osteoporosis mice in an AhR‐dependent manner. Mechanistically, intestinal AhR activation by Trp metabolites, especially IAA, effectively repairs intestinal barrier function by stimulating Wnt/β‐catenin signaling pathway. Consequently, enhanced M2 macrophage by supplementation with IAA and IPA secrete large amount of IL‐10 that expands from intestinal lamina propria to bone marrow, thereby simultaneously promoting osteoblastogenesis and inhibiting osteoclastogenesis in vivo and in vitro. Interestingly, supplementation with Trp metabolites exhibit negligible ameliorative effects on both gut homeostasis and bone loss of OVX mice with intestinal AhR knockout (VillinCreAhrfl/fl). These findings suggest that microbial Trp metabolites may be potential therapeutic candidates against osteoporosis via regulating AhR‐mediated gut‐bone axis.

Publisher

Wiley

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