Host and gut bacteria share metabolic pathways for anti-cancer drug metabolism

被引:0
|
作者
Peter Spanogiannopoulos
Than S. Kyaw
Ben G. H. Guthrie
Patrick H. Bradley
Joyce V. Lee
Jonathan Melamed
Ysabella Noelle Amora Malig
Kathy N. Lam
Daryll Gempis
Moriah Sandy
Wesley Kidder
Erin L. Van Blarigan
Chloe E. Atreya
Alan Venook
Roy R. Gerona
Andrei Goga
Katherine S. Pollard
Peter J. Turnbaugh
机构
[1] University of California San Francisco,Department of Microbiology and Immunology
[2] Gladstone Institutes,Department of Microbiology
[3] The Ohio State University,Department of Cell and Tissue Biology
[4] University of California San Francisco,Clinical Toxicology and Environmental Biomonitoring Laboratory
[5] University of California San Francisco,Department of Medicine
[6] University of California San Francisco,Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics
[7] UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center,Department of Urology
[8] University of California San Francisco,Institute for Human Genetics
[9] University of California San Francisco,Bakar Computational Health Sciences Institute
[10] University of California San Francisco,undefined
[11] University of California San Francisco,undefined
[12] Chan Zuckerberg Biohub,undefined
来源
Nature Microbiology | 2022年 / 7卷
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摘要
Pharmaceuticals have extensive reciprocal interactions with the microbiome, but whether bacterial drug sensitivity and metabolism is driven by pathways conserved in host cells remains unclear. Here we show that anti-cancer fluoropyrimidine drugs inhibit the growth of gut bacterial strains from 6 phyla. In both Escherichia coli and mammalian cells, fluoropyrimidines disrupt pyrimidine metabolism. Proteobacteria and Firmicutes metabolized 5-fluorouracil to its inactive metabolite dihydrofluorouracil, mimicking the major host mechanism for drug clearance. The preTA operon was necessary and sufficient for 5-fluorouracil inactivation by E. coli, exhibited high catalytic efficiency for the reductive reaction, decreased the bioavailability and efficacy of oral fluoropyrimidine treatment in mice and was prevalent in the gut microbiomes of colorectal cancer patients. The conservation of both the targets and enzymes for metabolism of therapeutics across domains highlights the need to distinguish the relative contributions of human and microbial cells to drug efficacy and side-effect profiles.
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页码:1605 / 1620
页数:15
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