TY - JOUR
T1 - Interplay between microbial d-amino acids and host d-amino acid oxidase modifies murine mucosal defence and gut microbiota
AU - Sasabe, Jumpei
AU - Miyoshi, Yurika
AU - Rakoff-Nahoum, Seth
AU - Zhang, Ting
AU - Mita, Masashi
AU - Davis, Brigid M.
AU - Hamase, Kenji
AU - Waldor, Matthew K.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (M.K.W.), NIH grant no. R37 AI-042347 (M.K.W.) and the Moritani Scholarship Foundation (J.S.).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Macmillan Publishers Limited.
PY - 2016/7/25
Y1 - 2016/7/25
N2 - L-Amino acids are the building blocks for proteins synthesized in ribosomes in all kingdoms of life, but d-amino acids (d-aa) have important non-ribosome-based functions 1. Mammals synthesize d-Ser and d-Asp, primarily in the central nervous system, where d-Ser is critical for neurotransmission 2. Bacteria synthesize a largely distinct set of d-aa, which become integral components of the cell wall and are also released as free d-aa 3,4. However, the impact of free microbial d-aa on host physiology at the host-microbial interface has not been explored. Here, we show that the mouse intestine is rich in free d-aa that are derived from the microbiota. Furthermore, the microbiota induces production of d-amino acid oxidase (DAO) by intestinal epithelial cells, including goblet cells, which secrete the enzyme into the lumen. Oxidative deamination of intestinal d-aa by DAO, which yields the antimicrobial product H2O2, protects the mucosal surface in the small intestine from the cholera pathogen. DAO also modifies the composition of the microbiota and is associated with microbial induction of intestinal sIgA. Collectively, these results identify d-aa and DAO as previously unrecognized mediators of microbe-host interplay and homeostasis on the epithelial surface of the small intestine.
AB - L-Amino acids are the building blocks for proteins synthesized in ribosomes in all kingdoms of life, but d-amino acids (d-aa) have important non-ribosome-based functions 1. Mammals synthesize d-Ser and d-Asp, primarily in the central nervous system, where d-Ser is critical for neurotransmission 2. Bacteria synthesize a largely distinct set of d-aa, which become integral components of the cell wall and are also released as free d-aa 3,4. However, the impact of free microbial d-aa on host physiology at the host-microbial interface has not been explored. Here, we show that the mouse intestine is rich in free d-aa that are derived from the microbiota. Furthermore, the microbiota induces production of d-amino acid oxidase (DAO) by intestinal epithelial cells, including goblet cells, which secrete the enzyme into the lumen. Oxidative deamination of intestinal d-aa by DAO, which yields the antimicrobial product H2O2, protects the mucosal surface in the small intestine from the cholera pathogen. DAO also modifies the composition of the microbiota and is associated with microbial induction of intestinal sIgA. Collectively, these results identify d-aa and DAO as previously unrecognized mediators of microbe-host interplay and homeostasis on the epithelial surface of the small intestine.
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U2 - 10.1038/nmicrobiol.2016.125
DO - 10.1038/nmicrobiol.2016.125
M3 - Article
C2 - 27670111
AN - SCOPUS:84983663590
SN - 2058-5276
VL - 1
JO - Nature Microbiology
JF - Nature Microbiology
M1 - 16125
ER -