Author:
Ding Qian-wen,Zhang Zhen,Li Yu,Liu Hong-liang,Hao Qiang,Yang Ya-lin,Ringø Einar,Olsen Rolf Erik,Clarke Jihong Liu,Ran Chao,Zhou Zhi-gang
Abstract
AbstractPropionate is a commonly used preservative in various food and feedstuffs and has been regarded as a food additive without safety concerns. However, we observed that dietary propionate supplementation induced intestinal damage in the context of high fat diet (HFD) in zebrafish. The intestinal damage was attributable to oxidative stress owing to impaired antioxidant capacity, which was caused by compromised SOD2 activity in the intestine. Global lysine propionylation analysis of the intestinal samples showed that SOD2 was propionylated at K132, and further biochemical assays demonstrated that K132 propionylation suppressed SOD2 activity. In addition, SIRT3 could directly interact with SOD2 and played an important role in regulating SOD2 activity via modulating depropionylation, and the enhanced SOD2 propionylation in zebrafish fed high fat plus propionate diet was attributable to reduced SIRT3 expression. Finally, we reveal that intestinal oxidative stress resulting from SOD2 propionylation contributed to the compositional change of gut microbiota, which further deteriorated intestinal oxidative stress independent of SIRT3. Collectively, the results in this study reveal a link between protein propionylation and intestine health, and suggest potential risk of a widely used food preservative in HFD context.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference73 articles.
1. From Dietary Fiber to Host Physiology: Short-Chain Fatty Acids as Key Bacterial Metabolites
2. Efsa panel on food additives and nutrient sources added to food (ans);EFSA Journal,2013
3. The utilization and mode of action of organic acids in the feeds of cultured aquatic animals;Reviews in Aquaculture,2017
4. Propionate mitochondrial toxicity in liver and skeletal muscle: Acyl CoA levels
5. Pougovkina, O.A. (2016). Functional interplay between protein acylation and cellular metabolism in metabolic disorders [D]. AMC-UvA, 1–159.