Sunday, 22 March 2015

Special microbes make anti-obesity molecule in the gut





This is an image of a weight scale. Credit: CDC/Debora Cartagena


Microbes may just be the next diet craze. Researchers have programmed bacteria to generate a molecule that, through normal metabolism, becomes a hunger-suppressing lipid. Mice that drank water laced with the programmed bacteria ate less, had lower body fat and staved off diabetes—even when fed a high-fat diet—offering a potential weight-loss strategy for humans.


The team will describe their approach in one of nearly 11,000 presentations at the 249th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS).


Obesity strongly increases the risk for developing several diseases and conditions, such as heart disease, stroke, and some types of cancer. One in three Americans is obese, and efforts to stem the epidemic have largely failed. Lifestyle changes and medication typically achieve only modest weight loss, and most people regain the weight. In recent years, numerous studies have shown that the population of living in the gut may be a key factor in determining the risk for obesity and related diseases, suggesting that strategically altering the gut microbiome may impact human health.


One advantage to microbial medicine would be that it's low maintenance, says Sean Davies, Ph.D. His goal is to produce therapeutic that live in the gut for six months or a year, providing sustained drug delivery. This is in contrast to weight-loss drugs that typically need to be taken at least daily, and people tend not to take their medications as directed over time. "So we need strategies that deliver the drug without requiring the patient to remember to take their pills every few hours," Davies says.


For a therapeutic molecule, Davies and colleagues at Vanderbilt University selected N-acyl-phosphatidylethanolamines (NAPEs), which are produced in the small intestine after a meal and are quickly converted into N-acyl-ethanolamines (NAEs), potent appetite-suppressing lipids. The researchers altered the genes of a strain of so it would make NAPEs. Then they added the bacteria to the drinking water of a strain of that, fed a high-fat diet, develop obesity, signs of diabetes and fatty livers.


Compared to mice who received plain water or water containing control, non-programmed bacteria, the mice drinking the NAPE-making bacteria gained 15 percent less weight over the eight weeks of treatment. In addition, their livers and glucose metabolism were better than in the . The mice that received the therapeutic bacteria remained lighter and leaner than control mice for up to 12 weeks after treatment ended.


In further experiments, Davies' team found that mice that lacked the enzyme to make NAEs from NAPEs were not helped by the NAPE-making bacteria; but this could be overcome by giving the mice NAE-making bacteria instead. "This suggests that it might be best to use NAE-making bacteria in eventual clinical trials," says Davies, especially if the researchers find that some people don't make very much of the enzyme that converts NAPEs to NAEs. "We think that this would work very well in humans."


The main obstacle to starting trials is the potential risk that a treated person could transmit these special bacteria to another by fecal exposure. "We don't want individuals to be unintentionally treated without their knowledge," says Davies. "Especially because you could imagine that there might be some individuals, say the very young or old or those with specific diseases, who could be harmed by being exposed to an appetite-suppressing bacteria. So, we are working on genetically modifying the bacteria to significantly reduce its ability to be transmitted."



More information: Incorporation of Therapeutic Bacteria into the Gut Microbiome for Treatment of Obesity, 249th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS).


Abstract

Altering the gut microbiome may be a useful long-term therapeutic strategy for treating metabolic disorders. One approach is to genetically modify intestinal bacteria to secrete therapeutic compounds that mitigate against metabolic diseases and thereby provide continuous treatment without requiring continuous drug administration. To test the feasibility of this concept, we genetically modified the intestinal bacteria E. coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) to secrete N-acyl-phosphatidylethanolamines (NAPEs) by expressing NAPE acyltransferase (pNAPE-EcN). NAPEs are normally synthesized by the small intestine and then rapidly hydrolyzed to the highly anorexigenic N-acyl-ethanolamines (NAEs) by NAPE-specific phospholipase D (NAPE-PLD) in the intestine. We found that administration of pNAPE-EcN bacteria to mice in their drinking water markedly inhibited body weight and body fat gain of mice fed a high-fat diet compared to mice administered control bacteria or vehicle only. Hepatic levels of NAEs and of fatty acid gene expression were markedly increased by pNAPE-EcN administration, demonstrating that bacterially synthesized therapeutic compounds can be delivered to extra-intestinal tissues. Viable pNAPE-EcN was detected in fecal samples for at least four weeks after ending their administration in drinking water and body weight and body fat remained significantly lower than for control treated mice even 12 weeks post-administration, demonstrating that sufficient pNAPE-EcN persisted after administration to exert pharmacological effects.

To test whether the anorexigenic effects of pNAPE-EcN required hydrolysis of NAPE to NAE, we coexpressed both NAPE-PLD and NAPE acyltransferase to generate bacteria that secrete NAEs (pNAE-EcN) but not NAPEs. In wild-type mice, administration of pNAE-EcN exerted similar effects as pNAPE-EcN. In NAPE-PLD null mice, administration of pNAE-EcN but not pNAPE-EcN significantly inhibited body weight and body fat gain on the high-fat diet. Thus hydrolysis of NAPE to NAE by NAPE-PLD is absolutely required for the anorexigenic effect of NAPE.

In summary, our studies provide proof-of-concept that incorporating bacteria engineered to secrete NAPE into the gut microbiota can be an effective long-term strategy for inhibiting development of obesity and provide insight into the mechanisms of action of these therapeutic bacteria.


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This is an image of a weight scale. Credit: CDC/Debora Cartagena


Microbes may just be the next diet craze. Researchers have programmed bacteria to generate a molecule that, through normal metabolism, becomes a hunger-suppressing lipid. Mice that drank water laced with the programmed bacteria ate less, had lower body fat and staved off diabetes—even when fed a high-fat diet—offering a potential weight-loss strategy for humans.


The team will describe their approach in one of nearly 11,000 presentations at the 249th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS).


Obesity strongly increases the risk for developing several diseases and conditions, such as heart disease, stroke, and some types of cancer. One in three Americans is obese, and efforts to stem the epidemic have largely failed. Lifestyle changes and medication typically achieve only modest weight loss, and most people regain the weight. In recent years, numerous studies have shown that the population of living in the gut may be a key factor in determining the risk for obesity and related diseases, suggesting that strategically altering the gut microbiome may impact human health.


One advantage to microbial medicine would be that it's low maintenance, says Sean Davies, Ph.D. His goal is to produce therapeutic that live in the gut for six months or a year, providing sustained drug delivery. This is in contrast to weight-loss drugs that typically need to be taken at least daily, and people tend not to take their medications as directed over time. "So we need strategies that deliver the drug without requiring the patient to remember to take their pills every few hours," Davies says.


For a therapeutic molecule, Davies and colleagues at Vanderbilt University selected N-acyl-phosphatidylethanolamines (NAPEs), which are produced in the small intestine after a meal and are quickly converted into N-acyl-ethanolamines (NAEs), potent appetite-suppressing lipids. The researchers altered the genes of a strain of so it would make NAPEs. Then they added the bacteria to the drinking water of a strain of that, fed a high-fat diet, develop obesity, signs of diabetes and fatty livers.


Compared to mice who received plain water or water containing control, non-programmed bacteria, the mice drinking the NAPE-making bacteria gained 15 percent less weight over the eight weeks of treatment. In addition, their livers and glucose metabolism were better than in the . The mice that received the therapeutic bacteria remained lighter and leaner than control mice for up to 12 weeks after treatment ended.


In further experiments, Davies' team found that mice that lacked the enzyme to make NAEs from NAPEs were not helped by the NAPE-making bacteria; but this could be overcome by giving the mice NAE-making bacteria instead. "This suggests that it might be best to use NAE-making bacteria in eventual clinical trials," says Davies, especially if the researchers find that some people don't make very much of the enzyme that converts NAPEs to NAEs. "We think that this would work very well in humans."


The main obstacle to starting trials is the potential risk that a treated person could transmit these special bacteria to another by fecal exposure. "We don't want individuals to be unintentionally treated without their knowledge," says Davies. "Especially because you could imagine that there might be some individuals, say the very young or old or those with specific diseases, who could be harmed by being exposed to an appetite-suppressing bacteria. So, we are working on genetically modifying the bacteria to significantly reduce its ability to be transmitted."



More information: Incorporation of Therapeutic Bacteria into the Gut Microbiome for Treatment of Obesity, 249th National Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society (ACS).


Abstract

Altering the gut microbiome may be a useful long-term therapeutic strategy for treating metabolic disorders. One approach is to genetically modify intestinal bacteria to secrete therapeutic compounds that mitigate against metabolic diseases and thereby provide continuous treatment without requiring continuous drug administration. To test the feasibility of this concept, we genetically modified the intestinal bacteria E. coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) to secrete N-acyl-phosphatidylethanolamines (NAPEs) by expressing NAPE acyltransferase (pNAPE-EcN). NAPEs are normally synthesized by the small intestine and then rapidly hydrolyzed to the highly anorexigenic N-acyl-ethanolamines (NAEs) by NAPE-specific phospholipase D (NAPE-PLD) in the intestine. We found that administration of pNAPE-EcN bacteria to mice in their drinking water markedly inhibited body weight and body fat gain of mice fed a high-fat diet compared to mice administered control bacteria or vehicle only. Hepatic levels of NAEs and of fatty acid gene expression were markedly increased by pNAPE-EcN administration, demonstrating that bacterially synthesized therapeutic compounds can be delivered to extra-intestinal tissues. Viable pNAPE-EcN was detected in fecal samples for at least four weeks after ending their administration in drinking water and body weight and body fat remained significantly lower than for control treated mice even 12 weeks post-administration, demonstrating that sufficient pNAPE-EcN persisted after administration to exert pharmacological effects.

To test whether the anorexigenic effects of pNAPE-EcN required hydrolysis of NAPE to NAE, we coexpressed both NAPE-PLD and NAPE acyltransferase to generate bacteria that secrete NAEs (pNAE-EcN) but not NAPEs. In wild-type mice, administration of pNAE-EcN exerted similar effects as pNAPE-EcN. In NAPE-PLD null mice, administration of pNAE-EcN but not pNAPE-EcN significantly inhibited body weight and body fat gain on the high-fat diet. Thus hydrolysis of NAPE to NAE by NAPE-PLD is absolutely required for the anorexigenic effect of NAPE.

In summary, our studies provide proof-of-concept that incorporating bacteria engineered to secrete NAPE into the gut microbiota can be an effective long-term strategy for inhibiting development of obesity and provide insight into the mechanisms of action of these therapeutic bacteria.


Medical Xpress on facebook

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Engineered bacteria keep mice lean


Jun 24, 2014



Obesity levels are rising throughout the world. As obesity rates increase, so do the incidences of diabetes, heart disease, and other serious health conditions.



Gut bacteria promote obesity in mice


Sep 30, 2014



A species of gut bacteria called Clostridium ramosum, coupled with a high-fat diet, may cause animals to gain weight. The work is published this week in mBio, the online open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiol ...



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Dec 03, 2014



(Medical Xpress)—Taking a single snapshot of all the bacteria that live in a mouse's–or person's–stomach and intestines can capture the health of the organism's digestive system and even their risk of developing immune ...



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