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Interrogation of the perturbed gut microbiota in gouty arthritis patients through in silico metabolic modeling
Author(s) -
Henson Michael A.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
engineering in life sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.547
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1618-2863
pISSN - 1618-0240
DOI - 10.1002/elsc.202100003
Subject(s) - gout , catabolism , butyrate , biochemistry , gut flora , amino acid , metabolism , metabolite , bacteroides , biology , chemistry , fermentation , genetics , bacteria
Recent studies have shown perturbed gut microbiota associated with gouty arthritis, a metabolic disease characterized by an imbalance between uric acid production and excretion. To mechanistically investigate altered microbiota metabolism associated with gout disease, 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequence data from stool samples of gout patients and healthy controls were computationally analyzed through bacterial community metabolic models. Patient‐specific community models constructed with the metagenomics modeling pipeline, mgPipe, were used to perform k‐means clustering of samples according to their metabolic capabilities. The clustering analysis generated statistically significant partitioning of samples into a Bacteroides ‐dominated, high gout cluster and a Faecalibacterium ‐elevated, low gout cluster. The high gout cluster was predicted to allow elevated synthesis of the amino acids D‐alanine and L‐alanine and byproducts of branched‐chain amino acid catabolism, while the low gout cluster allowed higher production of butyrate, the sulfur‐containing amino acids L‐cysteine and L‐methionine, and the L‐cysteine catabolic product H 2 S. By expanding the capabilities of mgPipe to provide taxa‐level resolution of metabolite exchange rates, acetate, D‐lactate and succinate exchanged from Bacteroides to Faecalibacterium were predicted to enhance butyrate production in the low gout cluster. Model predictions suggested that sulfur‐containing amino acid metabolism generally and H 2 S more specifically could be novel gout disease markers.

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