Metabolic modeling reveals a multi-level deregulation of host-microbiome metabolic networks in IBD

ORCID
0000-0001-7283-1768
Zugehörigkeit
Research Group Medical Systems Biology, Institute of Experimental Medicine Kiel University and University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein Kiel Germany
Taubenheim, Jan;
Zugehörigkeit
Research Group Medical Systems Biology, Institute of Experimental Medicine Kiel University and University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein Kiel Germany
Kadibalban, A. Samer;
GND
1376467879
ORCID
0000-0002-5041-1954
Zugehörigkeit
Research Group Medical Systems Biology, Institute of Experimental Medicine Kiel University and University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein Kiel Germany
Zimmermann, Johannes;
Zugehörigkeit
Clinic for Internal Medicine II, Hematology and Oncology University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein Kiel Germany
Taubenheim, Claudia;
ORCID
0000-0002-3735-9872
Zugehörigkeit
Institute of Clinical Molecular Biology Kiel University and University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein Kiel Germany
Tran, Florian;
Zugehörigkeit
Institute of Clinical Molecular Biology Kiel University and University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein Kiel Germany
Schreiber, Stefan;
ORCID
0000-0002-9692-8828
Zugehörigkeit
Institute of Clinical Molecular Biology Kiel University and University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein Kiel Germany
Rosenstiel, Philip;
ORCID
0000-0003-3482-7316
Zugehörigkeit
Institute of Clinical Molecular Biology Kiel University and University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein Kiel Germany
Aden, Konrad;
ORCID
0000-0001-8004-9514
Zugehörigkeit
Research Group Medical Systems Biology, Institute of Experimental Medicine Kiel University and University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein Kiel Germany
Kaleta, Christoph

Abstract Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) are chronic disorders involving dysregulated immune responses. Despite the role of disrupted host-microbial interaction in the pathophysiology of IBD, the underlying metabolic principles are not fully understood. We densely profiled microbiome, transcriptome and metabolome signatures from longitudinal IBD cohorts before and after advanced drug therapy initiation and reconstructed metabolic models of the gut microbiome and the host intestine to study host-microbiome metabolic cross-talk in the context of inflammation. Here, we identified concomitant changes in metabolic activity across data layers involving NAD, amino acid, one-carbon and phospholipid metabolism. In particular on the host level, elevated tryptophan catabolism depleted circulating tryptophan, thereby impairing NAD biosynthesis. Reduced host transamination reactions disrupted nitrogen homeostasis and polyamine/glutathione metabolism. The suppressed one-carbon cycle in patient tissues altered phospholipid profiles due to limited choline availability. Simultaneously, microbiome metabolic shifts in NAD, amino acid and polyamine metabolism exacerbated these host metabolic imbalances. Leveraging host and microbe metabolic models, we predicted dietary interventions remodeling the microbiome to restore metabolic homeostasis, suggesting novel therapeutic strategies for IBD.

Here, using multi-omics, the authors reconstruct metabolic models and uncover how disrupted metabolic interactions between gut microbes and the host contribute to IBD, together suggesting that dietary modulation of the microbiome may help restore metabolic balance.

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