Department of Biochemistry and Genetics, La Trobe Institute for Molecular Science, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Subcell Biochem. 2021;97:509-521. doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-67171-6_21.
It has been well established that diet influences the health status of the consuming organism. Recently, extracellular vesicles (EVs) present in dietary sources are proposed to be involved in cross-species and kingdom communication. As EVs contain a lipid bilayer and carry bioactive cargo of proteins and nucleic acids, they are proposed to survive harsh degrading conditions of the gut and enter systemic circulation. Following the bioavailability, several studies have supported the functional role of dietary EVs in various tissues of the consuming organism. Simultaneously, multiple studies have refuted the possibility that dietary EVs mediate cross-species communication and hence the topic is controversial. The feasibility of the concept remains under scrutiny primarily owing to the lack of significant in vivo evidence to complement the in vitro speculations. Concerns surrounding EV stability in the harsh degrading gut environment, lack of mechanism explaining intestinal uptake and bioavailability in systemic circulation have impeded the acceptance of their functional role. This chapter discusses the current evidences that support dietary EV-based cross species communication and enlists several issues that need to be addressed in this field.
饮食影响着摄入生物体的健康状况,这一点已得到充分证实。最近,人们提出饮食来源中的细胞外囊泡(EVs)参与了跨物种和跨领域的交流。由于 EVs 含有脂质双层,并携带蛋白质和核酸等生物活性物质,因此它们能够在肠道恶劣的降解条件下存活并进入体循环。在具有生物利用度后,多项研究支持了饮食 EVs 在摄入生物体的各种组织中发挥功能作用。同时,多项研究反驳了饮食 EVs 介导跨物种交流的可能性,因此该主题存在争议。由于缺乏补充体外推测的体内显著证据,该概念的可行性仍在审查中。围绕 EV 在恶劣降解肠道环境中的稳定性、缺乏解释肠道摄取和体循环生物利用度的机制的问题,阻碍了人们对其功能作用的接受。本章讨论了支持饮食 EV 介导的跨物种通讯的现有证据,并列出了该领域需要解决的几个问题。