The relevance of bacterial isoprenoid biosynthetic pathways for host-microbe interactions


Autoria(s): Nolan, James A.
Contribuinte(s)

Gahan, Cormac G.

Hill, Colin

Irish Research Council for Science Engineering and Technology

Science Foundation Ireland

Data(s)

04/11/2015

04/11/2015

2014

2014

Resumo

This thesis was undertaken to investigate the relevance of two bacterial isoprenoid biosynthetic pathways (Mevalonate (MVAL) and 2-C-methyl-D-erythritol 4-phosphate (MEP)) for host-microbe interactions. We determined a significant reduction in microbial diversity in the murine gut microbiota (by next generation sequencing) following oral administration of a common anti-cholesterol drug Rosuvastatin (RSV) that targets mammalian and bacterial HMG-CoA reductase (HMG-R) for inhibition of MVAL formation. In tandem we identified significant hepatic and intestinal off-target alterations to the murine metabolome indicating alterations in inflammation, bile acid profiles and antimicrobial peptide synthesis with implications on community structure of the gastrointestinal microbiota in statin-treated animals. However we found no effect on local Short Chain Fatty Acid biosynthesis (metabolic health marker in our model). We demonstrated direct inhibition of bacterial growth in-vitro by RSV which correlated with reductions in bacterial MVAL formation. However this was only at high doses of RSV. Our observations demonstrate a significant RSV-associated impact on the gut microbiota prompting similar human analysis. Successful deletion of another MVAL pathway enzyme (HMG-CoA synthase (mvaS)) involved in Listeria monocytogenes EGDe isoprenoid biosynthesis determined that the enzyme is non-essential for normal growth and in-vivo pathogenesis of this pathogen. We highlight potential evidence for alternative means of synthesis of the HMG-CoA substrate that could render mvaS activity redundant under our test conditions. Finally, we showed by global gene expression analysis (Massive Analysis of cDNA Ends (MACE RNA-seq) a significant role for the penultimate MEP pathway metabolite (E)-4-hydroxy-3-methyl-2-but-2-enyl pyrophosphate (HMBPP) in significant up regulation of genes of immunity and antigen presentation in THP-1 cells at nanomolar levels. We infected THP-1 cells with wild type or HMBPP under/over-producing L. monoctyogenes EGDe mutants and determined subtle effects of HMBPP upon overall host responses to Listeria infection. Overall our findings provide greater insights regarding bacterial isoprenoid biosynthetic pathways for host-microbe/microbe-host dialogue.

Irish Research Council for Science Engineering and Technology (EMBARK initiative); Science Foundation Ireland (Alimentary Pharmabiotic Centre SFI/12/RC/2273)

Accepted Version

Not peer reviewed

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

Nolan, J.A. 2014. The relevance of bacterial isoprenoid biosynthetic pathways for host-microbe interactions. PhD Thesis, University College Cork.

268

http://hdl.handle.net/10468/2023

Idioma(s)

en

en

Publicador

University College Cork

Direitos

© 2014, James A. Nolan.

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/

Palavras-Chave #Listeria monocytogenes EGDe #HMG-CoA synthase #HMBPP #THP-1 #Statin #Rosuvastatin #Isoprenoid #Microbiota #Bile acid #Inflammation #Non-essential #Immunity #Antigen presentation
Tipo

Doctoral thesis

Doctoral

PhD (Science)