Small molecule inhibition of gut microbial choline trimethylamine lyase activity alters host cholesterol and bile acid metabolism

Apr 25, 2020American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology

Blocking gut bacteria’s choline enzyme changes how the body manages cholesterol and bile acids

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Abstract

Treatment with the choline TMA lyase inhibitor, iodomethylcholine (IMC), increased fecal neutral sterol loss in mice.

  • IMC treatment led to increased coprostanol, a metabolite of cholesterol, indicating enhanced fecal cholesterol loss.
  • The inhibitor caused significant reductions in the intestinal sterol transporter Niemann-pick C1-like 1 (NPC1L1).
  • IMC reversed changes in the gut microbial community induced by a choline-supplemented diet.
  • The treatment prevented diet-induced hepatic cholesterol accumulation and upregulated the bile acid synthetic enzyme CYP7A1.
  • These findings suggest that the gut microbiota-driven TMAO pathway is closely linked to both microbe and host cholesterol and bile acid metabolism.

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