Author:
Robertson L W,Chandrasekaran A,Reuning R H,Hui J,Rawal B D
Abstract
The anaerobic bacterium Eubacterium lentum, a common constituent of the intestinal microflora, inactivates digoxin by reducing the unsaturated lactone ring. Reduction of the cardiac glycoside by growing cultures of E. lentum ATCC 25559 proceeded in a stereospecific manner, with the 20R-dihydrodigoxin constituting more than 99% of the product formed. This is in contrast to the 3:1 ratio of 20R and 20S epimers formed in the chemical catalytic hydrogenation. Formation of the reduced glycosides proceeded quantitatively when an overall concentration of 10 micrograms/ml was added to the cultures. E. lentum did not hydrolyze the digitoxose sugars from C-3 of the parent glycoside. However, the synthetically prepared sugar-hydrolyzed metabolites (digoxigenin, digoxigenin monodigitoxoside, and digoxigenin bisdigitoxoside) were reduced to the corresponding dihydro metabolites. Repetition of the experiments with a feces sample from a volunteer who was known to be a converter of digoxin to dihydrodigoxin gave results identical to those obtained with pure E. lentum cultures.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
35 articles.
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