4.7 Article

Urolithin A attenuates arsenic-induced gut barrier dysfunction

Journal

ARCHIVES OF TOXICOLOGY
Volume 96, Issue 4, Pages 987-1007

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00204-022-03232-2

Keywords

Microbiota; Microbial metabolites; Urolithin A; Arsenic; Oxidative stress; Gut barrier function

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH/NCI [CA191683]
  2. NIH/NIGMS CoBRE Grant [P20GM125504-01]
  3. NIH/NIEHS [P30ES030283]
  4. The Jewish Heritage Fund for Excellence Research Enhancement Grant
  5. UofL Health-BCC

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Environmental chemicals like iAs can increase oxidative stress in the body, disrupting gut homeostasis, but gut microbiota are essential to protect against its toxicity, with microbial metabolites such as UroA potentially providing protection against environmental hazards by reducing oxidative stress and enhancing gut barrier function.
Environmental chemicals such as inorganic arsenic (iAs) significantly contribute to redox toxicity in the human body by enhancing oxidative stress. Imbalanced oxidative stress rapidly interferes with gut homeostasis and affects variety of cellular processes such as proliferation, apoptosis, and maintenance of intestinal barrier integrity. It has been shown that gut microbiota are essential to protect against iAs(3+)-induced toxicity. However, the effect of microbial metabolites on iAs(3+)-induced toxicity and loss of gut barrier integrity has not been investigated. The objectives of the study are to investigate impact of iAs on gut barrier function and determine benefits of gut microbial metabolite, urolithin A (UroA) against iAs(3+)-induced adversaries on gut epithelium. We have utilized both colon epithelial cells and in a human intestinal 3D organoid model system to investigate iAs(3+)-induced cell toxicity, oxidative stress, and gut barrier dysfunction in the presence or absence of UroA. Here, we report that treatment with UroA attenuated iAs(3+)-induced cell toxicity, apoptosis, and oxidative stress in colon epithelial cells. Moreover, our data suggest that UroA significantly reduces iAs(3+)-induced gut barrier permeability and inflammatory markers in both colon epithelial cells and in a human intestinal 3D organoid model system. Mechanistically, UroA protected against iAs(3+)-induced disruption of tight junctional proteins in intestinal epithelial cells through blockade of oxidative stress and markers of inflammation. Taken together, our studies for the first time suggest that microbial metabolites such as UroA can potentially be used to protect against environmental hazards by reducing intestinal oxidative stress and by enhancing gut barrier function.

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