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Multiomics analysis reveals the biological effects of live Roseburia intestinalis as a high-butyrate-producing bacterium in human intestinal epithelial cellsopen access

Authors
Song, Won-SukJo, Sung-HyunLee, Jae-SeungKwon, Ji-EunPark, Ji-HyeonKim, Ye-RimBaek, Ji-HyunKim, Min-GyuKwon, Seo-YoungKim, Yun-Gon
Issue Date
Dec-2023
Publisher
WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
Keywords
butyrate-producing bacteria; host-microbe interaction; LC-MS/MS; multiomics analysis; prebiotic carbohydrates; Roseburia intestinalis
Citation
BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL, v.18, no.12
Journal Title
BIOTECHNOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume
18
Number
12
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/ssu/handle/2018.sw.ssu/44419
DOI
10.1002/biot.202300180
ISSN
1860-6768
1860-7314
Abstract
Butyrate-producing bacteria play a key role in human health, and recent studies have triggered interest in their development as next-generation probiotics. However, there remains limited knowledge not only on the identification of high-butyrate-producing bacteria in the human gut but also in the metabolic capacities for prebiotic carbohydrates and their interaction with the host. Herein, it was discovered that Roseburia intestinalis produces higher levels of butyrate and digests a wider variety of prebiotic polysaccharide structures compared with other human major butyrate-producing bacteria (Eubacterium rectale, Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, and Roseburia hominis). Moreover, R. intestinalis extracts upregulated the mRNA expression of tight junction proteins (TJP1, OCLN, and CLDN3) in human intestinal epithelial cells more than other butyrate-producing bacteria. R. intestinalis was cultured with human intestinal epithelial cells in the mimetic intestinal host-microbe interaction coculture system to explore the health-promoting effects using multiomics approaches. Consequently, it was discovered that live R. intestinalis only enhances purine metabolism and the oxidative pathway, increasing adenosine triphosphate levels in human intestinal epithelial cells, but that heat-killed bacteria had no effect. Therefore, this study proposes that R. intestinalis has potentially high value as a next-generation probiotic to promote host intestinal health.
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