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Microbiome-derived carnitine mimics as previously unknown mediators of gut-brain axis communication

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Discovery of novel bacterial metabolites reveals an unprecedented role for the microbiome in gut-brain axis communication. Alterations to the gut microbiome are associated with various neurological diseases, yet evidence of… Click to show full abstract

Discovery of novel bacterial metabolites reveals an unprecedented role for the microbiome in gut-brain axis communication. Alterations to the gut microbiome are associated with various neurological diseases, yet evidence of causality and identity of microbiome-derived compounds that mediate gut-brain axis interaction remain elusive. Here, we identify two previously unknown bacterial metabolites 3-methyl-4-(trimethylammonio)butanoate and 4-(trimethylammonio)pentanoate, structural analogs of carnitine that are present in both gut and brain of specific pathogen–free mice but absent in germ-free mice. We demonstrate that these compounds are produced by anaerobic commensal bacteria from the family Lachnospiraceae (Clostridiales) family, colocalize with carnitine in brain white matter, and inhibit carnitine-mediated fatty acid oxidation in a murine cell culture model of central nervous system white matter. This is the first description of direct molecular inter-kingdom exchange between gut prokaryotes and mammalian brain cells, leading to inhibition of brain cell function.

Keywords: axis communication; brain axis; microbiome derived; brain; gut brain; previously unknown

Journal Title: Science Advances
Year Published: 2020

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