611 research outputs found

    Influence of gene-environment interaction on the gut microflora-mammalian contribution to metabolism and toxicity

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    Gut microbial composition and activity exert a strong influence on the metabolic phenotype of the host, and variation in the metabolic phenotype is a major factor underlying inter-individual variation in drug responses. In this thesis, the role of gut microflora on the mammalian metabolic system was explored with specific focus on the influence on xenobiotic metabolism and toxicity. Systems biology approaches were utilised to examine microfloral-mammalian interactions and mechanisms of drug toxicity. Multi-omic techniques, namely transcriptomics and metabonomics, were employed to characterise animal models used for investigating microfloral-mammalian interactions. These included germ-free, antibiotic-treated, and 'conve-ntional' rats. The utility of applying systems biology approaches to elucidate mechanisms of toxicity was demonstrated in conventional animals administered methapyrilene using metabonomic and protein-analysis techniques. Finally, the influence of the gut microbiota on the metabolism and toxicity of hydrazine was explored using an integrated transcriptomic and metabonomic approach. Microfloral absence modulated host metabolism directly and indirectly at the transcriptome and metabonome level, specifically drug, lipid and energy metabolism. Temporary suppression of the microbiota through antibiotic treatment did not disrupt the biological system greatly but minor disruption was observed upon re-colonisation. Methapyrilene dosing modified the structure and activity of a urea cycle enzyme and by integrating metabonomics and focused assays the potential for these protein modifications to be a mechanism of toxicity were investigated. In germ-free anitn~ls the effect of hrdrazine was variable, \A{ith toxicity enhanced in two of the three members compared to conventional animals. This highlights the potential for microbiota to influence host susceptibility towards drug toxicity and shows that toxic responses can be diverse in the absence of a functional microbiome. These studies demonstrate the use of applying systems biology approaches to investigate complex biological systems and indicate that gut microorganisms can modulate host metabolism and potentially be a factor in idiosyncratic drug responses.Imperial Users onl

    Biology of the microbiome 2: metabolic role

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    The human microbiome is a new frontier in biology and one that is helping to define what it is to be human. Recently, we have begun to understand that the "communication" between the host and its microbiome is via a metabolic superhighway. By interrogating and understanding the molecules involved we may start to know who the main players are, and how we can modulate them and the mechanisms of health and disease.</p

    Para-cresol production by Clostridium difficile affects microbial diversity and membrane integrity of Gram-negative bacteria

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    Clostridium difficile is a Gram-positive spore-forming anaerobe and a major cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhoea. Disruption of the commensal microbiota, such as through treatment with broad-spectrum antibiotics, is a critical precursor for colonisation by C. difficile and subsequent disease. Furthermore, failure of the gut microbiota to recover colonisation resistance can result in recurrence of infection. An unusual characteristic of C. difficile among gut bacteria is its ability to produce the bacteriostatic compound para-cresol (p-cresol) through fermentation of tyrosine. Here, we demonstrate that the ability of C. difficile to produce p-cresol in vitro provides a competitive advantage over gut bacteria including Escherichia coli, Klebsiella oxytoca and Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron. Metabolic profiling of competitive co-cultures revealed that acetate, alanine, butyrate, isobutyrate, p-cresol and p-hydroxyphenylacetate were the main metabolites responsible for differentiating the parent strain C. difficile (630Δerm) from a defined mutant deficient in p-cresol production. Moreover, we show that the p-cresol mutant displays a fitness defect in a mouse relapse model of C. difficile infection (CDI). Analysis of the microbiome from this mouse model of CDI demonstrates that colonisation by the p-cresol mutant results in a distinctly altered intestinal microbiota, and metabolic profile, with a greater representation of Gammaproteobacteria, including the Pseudomonales and Enterobacteriales. We demonstrate that Gammaproteobacteria are susceptible to exogenous p-cresol in vitro and that there is a clear divide between bacterial Phyla and their susceptibility to p-cresol. In general, Gram-negative species were relatively sensitive to p-cresol, whereas Gram-positive species were more tolerant. This study demonstrates that production of p-cresol by C. difficile has an effect on the viability of intestinal bacteria as well as the major metabolites produced in vitro. These observations are upheld in a mouse model of CDI, in which p-cresol production affects the biodiversity of gut microbiota and faecal metabolite profiles, suggesting that p-cresol production contributes to C. difficile survival and pathogenesis.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio

    A comparison of collision cross section values obtained via travelling wave ion mobility-mass spectrometry and ultra high performance liquid chromatography-ion mobility-mass spectrometry : application to the characterisation of metabolites in rat urine

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    A comprehensive Collision Cross Section (CCS) library was obtained via Travelling Wave Ion Guide mobility measurements through direct infusion (DI). The library consists of CCS and Mass Spectral (MS) data in negative and positive ElectroSpray Ionisation (ESI) mode for 463 and 479 endogenous metabolites, respectively. For both ionisation modes combined, TWCCSN2 data were obtained for 542 non-redundant metabolites. These data were acquired on two different ion mobility enabled orthogonal acceleration QToF MS systems in two different laboratories, with the majority of the resulting TWCCSN2 values (from detected compounds) found to be within 1% of one another. Validation of these results against two independent, external TWCCSN2 data sources and predicted TWCCSN2 values indicated to be within 1-2% of these other values. The same metabolites were then analysed using a rapid reversed-phase ultra (high) performance liquid chromatographic (U(H)PLC) separation combined with IM and MS (IM-MS) thus providing retention time (tr), m/z and TWCCSN2 values (with the latter compared with the DI-IM-MS data). Analytes for which TWCCSN2 values were obtained by U(H)PLC-IM-MS showed good agreement with the results obtained from DI-IM-MS. The repeatability of the TWCCSN2 values obtained for these metabolites on the different ion mobility QToF systems, using either DI or LC, encouraged the further evaluation of the U(H)PLC-IM-MS approach via the analysis of samples of rat urine, from control and methotrexate-treated animals, in order to assess the potential of the approach for metabolite identification and profiling in metabolic phenotyping studies. Based on the database derived from the standards 63 metabolites were identified in rat urine, using positive ESI, based on the combination of tr, TWCCSN2 and MS data.</p

    Competing Ideologies in the German Revolution of 1848

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    This article takes a look at three broadly identified ideologies present in Germany during the course of the 1848 Revolution. These perspectives define goals set by different social classes and what their idea of a unified Germany may or may not look like. The research was conducted using as much primary source research as possible, utilizing memoirs, newspapers, and a few excerpts from flyers. The overall idea is to show that the 1848 Revolution should not be regarded as a failure, and should be looked at for what it did accomplish in organizing the political goals of social classes and helping Germans begin a serious discussion of unification
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