Ma Ning, Ma Xi
State Key Laboratory of Animal Nutrition, College of Animal Science and Technology, China Agricultural Univ., Beijing 100193, China.
College of Animal Science and Technology, Shihezi Univ., Xinjiang 832003, China.
Compr Rev Food Sci Food Saf. 2019 Jan;18(1):221-242. doi: 10.1111/1541-4337.12401. Epub 2018 Dec 18.
Dietary amino acids (AAs) are not only absorbed and metabolized by enterocytes but also available to the microbiota in the gut in mammals. In addition to serving as the materials for protein synthesis, AAs can act as precursors for numerous metabolic end products in reactions involving the intestinal mucosa and microbiota. After penetrating the epithelial barrier, microbial metabolites can enter and accumulate in the host circulatory system, where they are sensed by immune cells and then elicit a wide range of biological functions via different receptors and mechanisms. Some intestinal bacteria can also synthesize certain AAs, implying that the exchange of AAs between hosts and microorganisms is bidirectional. Changes in AA composition and abundance can affect AA-metabolizing bacterial communities and modulate macrophages and dendritic cells via toll-like receptors (TLRs), autoinducer-2 (AI-2), and NOD-like receptors (NLRs), and also regulate the gut-microbiome-immune axis via aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), serotonin/5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), and other signaling pathways, all of which play critical roles in regulating the intestinal mucosal immunity and microbiota directly or indirectly, contributing to intestinal homeostasis. Therefore, the current findings of the effects of certain functional AAs on the gut-microbiome-immune axis are reviewed, illustrating signaling pathways of tryptophan (Trp), glutamine (Gln), methionine (Met), and branched-chain AAs (BCAAs) in the intestinal barrier and regarding immunity via crosstalk with their receptors or ligands. These findings have shed light on the clinical applications of dietary AAs in improving gut microbiota and mucosal immunity, therefore benefiting the gut as well as local and systemic health.
膳食氨基酸(AAs)不仅被肠上皮细胞吸收和代谢,在哺乳动物中还可供肠道微生物群利用。除了作为蛋白质合成的原料外,氨基酸在涉及肠黏膜和微生物群的反应中还可作为众多代谢终产物的前体。微生物代谢产物穿透上皮屏障后,可进入宿主循环系统并在其中蓄积,免疫细胞可感知这些代谢产物,然后通过不同的受体和机制引发广泛的生物学功能。一些肠道细菌还能合成特定的氨基酸,这意味着宿主与微生物之间的氨基酸交换是双向的。氨基酸组成和丰度的变化会影响代谢氨基酸的细菌群落,并通过Toll样受体(TLRs)、自诱导物-2(AI-2)和NOD样受体(NLRs)调节巨噬细胞和树突状细胞,还可通过芳烃受体(AhR)、血清素/5-羟色胺(5-HT)和其他信号通路调节肠道微生物群-免疫轴,所有这些在直接或间接调节肠道黏膜免疫和微生物群方面都起着关键作用,有助于维持肠道稳态。因此,本文综述了某些功能性氨基酸对肠道微生物群-免疫轴影响的当前研究结果,阐述了色氨酸(Trp)、谷氨酰胺(Gln)、蛋氨酸(Met)和支链氨基酸(BCAAs)在肠道屏障中的信号通路以及通过与其受体或配体相互作用实现的免疫调节。这些研究结果为膳食氨基酸在改善肠道微生物群和黏膜免疫方面的临床应用提供了思路,从而有益于肠道以及局部和全身健康。