Antibiotic-induced gut microbiota disruption promotes vascular calcification by reducing short-chain fatty acid acetate
-
Published:2024-08-24
Issue:1
Volume:30
Page:
-
ISSN:1528-3658
-
Container-title:Molecular Medicine
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Mol Med
Author:
Zeng Shi-Yu,Liu Yi-Fu,Zeng Zhao-Lin,Zhao Zhi-Bo,Yan Xi-Lin,Zheng Jie,Chen Wen-Hang,Wang Zhen-Xing,Xie Hui,Liu Jiang-Hua
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Vascular calcification is a common vascular lesion associated with high morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular events. Antibiotics can disrupt the gut microbiota (GM) and have been shown to exacerbate or attenuate several human diseases. However, whether antibiotic-induced GM disruption affects vascular calcification remains unclear.
Methods
Antibiotic cocktail (ABX) treatment was utilized to test the potential effects of antibiotics on vascular calcification. The effects of antibiotics on GM and serum short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) in vascular calcification mice were analyzed using 16 S rRNA gene sequencing and targeted metabolomics, respectively. Further, the effects of acetate, propionate and butyrate on vascular calcification were evaluated. Finally, the potential mechanism by which acetate inhibits osteogenic transformation of VSMCs was explored by proteomics.
Results
ABX and vancomycin exacerbated vascular calcification. 16 S rRNA gene sequencing and targeted metabolomics analyses showed that ABX and vancomycin treatments resulted in decreased abundance of Bacteroidetes in the fecal microbiota of the mice and decreased serum levels of SCFAs. In addition, supplementation with acetate was found to reduce calcium salt deposition in the aorta of mice and inhibit osteogenic transformation in VSMCs. Finally, using proteomics, we found that the inhibition of osteogenic transformation of VSMCs by acetate may be related to glutathione metabolism and ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis. After adding the glutathione inhibitor Buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) and the ubiquitination inhibitor MG132, we found that the inhibitory effect of acetate on VSMC osteogenic differentiation was weakened by the intervention of BSO, but MG132 had no effect.
Conclusion
ABX exacerbates vascular calcification, possibly by depleting the abundance of Bacteroidetes and SCFAs in the intestine. Supplementation with acetate has the potential to alleviate vascular calcification, which may be an important target for future treatment of vascular calcification.
Funder
Natural Science Foundation of Hunan Province National Natural Science Foundation of China Postgraduate Scientific Research Innovation Project of Hunan Province Clinical Rsearch 4310 Program of the First Affiliated Hospotal of the University of South China
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference69 articles.
1. Akram F, Imtiaz M, Haq IU. Emergent crisis of antibiotic resistance: a silent pandemic threat to 21(St) century. Microb Pathog. 2023;174:105923. 2. Aoki R, Onuki M, Hattori K, Ito M, Yamada T, Kamikado K, Kim YG, Nakamoto N, Kimura I, Clarke JM, Kanai T, Hase K. Commensal microbe-derived acetate suppresses NAFLD/NASH development via hepatic FFAR2 signalling in mice. Microbiome. 2021;9:188. 3. Armet AM, Deehan EC, O’Sullivan AF, Mota JF, Field CJ, Prado CM, Lucey AJ, Walter J. Rethinking healthy eating in light of the gut microbiome. Cell Host Microbe. 2022;30:764–85. 4. Browne AJ, Chipeta MG, Haines-Woodhouse G, Kumaran EPA, Hamadani BHK, Zaraa S, Henry NJ, Deshpande A, Reiner RC Jr., Day NPJ, Lopez AD, Dunachie S, Moore CE, Stergachis A, Hay SI, Dolecek C. Global antibiotic consumption and usage in humans, 2000-18: a spatial modelling study. Lancet Planet Health. 2021;5:e893–904. 5. Chambers LM, Esakov Rhoades EL, Bharti R, Braley C, Tewari S, Trestan L, Alali Z, Bayik D, Lathia JD, Sangwan N, Bazeley P, Joehlin-Price AS, Wang Z, Dutta S, Dwidar M, Hajjar A, Ahern PP, Claesen J, Rose P, Vargas R, Brown JM, Michener CM, Reizes O. Disruption of the gut microbiota confers Cisplatin Resistance in Epithelial Ovarian Cancer. Cancer Res. 2022;82:4654–69.
|
|