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Commentary Open Access | 10.1172/JCI161572
Enteric Neuroscience Program, Department of Medicine and Physiology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.
Address correspondence to: Purna C. Kashyap, Mayo Clinic, 200 First Street SW, Rochester, Minnesota 55905, USA. Phone: 507.293.7911; Email: Kashyap.purna@mayo.edu.
Find articles by Xiao, Y. in: JCI | PubMed | Google Scholar
Enteric Neuroscience Program, Department of Medicine and Physiology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.
Address correspondence to: Purna C. Kashyap, Mayo Clinic, 200 First Street SW, Rochester, Minnesota 55905, USA. Phone: 507.293.7911; Email: Kashyap.purna@mayo.edu.
Find articles by Kashyap, P. in: JCI | PubMed | Google Scholar
Published July 15, 2022 - More info
Intractable functional constipation (IFC) is the most severe form of constipation, but its etiology has long been unknown. We hypothesized that IFC is caused by refractory infection by a pathogenic bacterium. Here, we isolated from patients with IFC a Shigella species — peristaltic contraction–inhibiting bacterium (PIB) — that significantly inhibited peristaltic contraction of the colon by production of docosapentenoic acid (DPA). PIB colonized mice for at least 6 months. Oral administration of PIB was sufficient to induce constipation, which was reversed by PIB-specific phages. A mutated PIB with reduced DPA was incapable of inhibiting colonic function and inducing constipation, suggesting that DPA produced by PIB was the key mediator of the genesis of constipation. PIBs were detected in stools of 56% (38 of 68) of the IFC patients, but not in those of non-IFC or healthy individuals (0 of 180). DPA levels in stools were elevated in 44.12% (30 of 68) of the IFC patients but none of the healthy volunteers (0 of 97). Our results suggest that Shigella sp. PIB may be the critical causative pathogen for IFC, and detection of fecal PIB plus DPA may be a reliable method for IFC diagnosis and classification.
Xin Chen, Tian-Tian Qiu, Ye Wang, Li-Yang Xu, Jie Sun, Zhi-Hui Jiang, Wei Zhao, Tao Tao, Yu-Wei Zhou, Li-Sha Wei, Ye-Qiong Li, Yan-Yan Zheng, Guo-Hua Zhou, Hua-Qun Chen, Jian Zhang, Xiao-Bo Feng, Fang-Yu Wang, Ning Li, Xue-Na Zhang, Jun Jiang, Min-Sheng Zhu
Gastrointestinal (GI) motility requires coordination among several cell types in the intestinal epithelium and the neuromuscular apparatus. A disruption in GI motility was primarily attributed to disruption of this coordinated effort among different host cells, but recent studies have begun to uncover how the products of gut microbiota can alter GI motility by modulating the function of different host cells and the interactions among them. In this issue of the JCI, Chen, Qiu, et al. used a reverse translation approach, isolating a Shigella sp. — peristaltic contraction–inhibiting bacterium (PIB) — from a cohort of patients with intractable constipation. They identified an ω-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA), docosapentaenoic acid (DPA), produced by this Shigella variant, as an important driver of constipation using a series of microbiologic, biochemical, and genetic manipulations combined with in vitro and in vivo studies. This finding advances the field, given that production of DPA is rare in the human gut and appears to have a distinct effect on GI physiology.
Chronic constipation is a common symptom with an overall median prevalence in adults of around 16% and a higher prevalence in women, adults over 60 years of age, and older adults who reside in institutions (1). Constipation can be classified by the Rome criteria, which help categorize patients with gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms. Patients and physicians often regard constipation as a decrease in stool frequency — such as less than 3 bowel movements a week — but Rome IV criteria also include symptoms such as straining, lumpy or hard stool, sensation of incomplete evacuation or anorectal blockage, and manual maneuvers to facilitate defecation as indicators of constipation (2). An important consideration is the presence of symptoms for at least 3 months, with onset of symptoms within the past 6 months, which highlights the chronic nature of the symptoms. While patients with constipation may experience abdominal pain, the presence of abdominal pain at least once a week in association with defecation and a change in frequency or form of stool (with greater than 25% Bristol 1 or 2 stool) is categorized as constipation-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) (2). Alternatively, constipation can also be defined as (a) normal or (b) slow stool transit constipation or (c) pelvic floor dysfunction/defecatory disorder, based on underlying changes in GI transit or anorectal function.
The etiology of constipation is multifactorial, but recent studies have found a bidirectional interplay between GI transit and gut microbiota. Gut microbial metabolites alter GI transit, and changes in GI transit, in turn, are associated with alteration in gut microbiota composition and function. Furthermore, change in gut microbial function due to delayed GI transit promotes a feed-forward loop that further slows GI transit, highlighting the reciprocating reinforcement of pathophysiological host-microbe interaction (4). GI transit time (time for passage of food bolus thought the GI tract) or bead expulsion time (time for expulsion of a glass bead inserted through the anus) are often used to assess whole gut or distal colon contractility and secretion, respectively, in rodent models. This process requires careful coordination between multiple cell types, including enteroendocrine and goblet cells in the epithelium, enteric neurons and glia, interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC), and smooth muscle and immune cells (5). Typically, studies in preclinical models have focused on the interaction among the different host cells, but recent studies have found that alterations in specific gut microbial metabolites or components can alter GI transit by influencing interaction among host cells.
Several studies following the typical discovery-to-translation paradigm have identified microbiota-driven mechanisms that can alter GI transit. These studies utilized an array of preclinical models to determine the role of gut microbiota, such as using antibiotics to disrupt gut microbiota in conventionally raised mice, or comparing conventionally raised and germ-free (GF) mice. The specific effect of microbe(s) is often investigated by colonizing GF or antibiotic-treated mice with individual or a consortia of bacteria or human-derived gut bacteria. The findings from these models are combined with ex vivo (e.g., organ bath studies), culture-based (primary cells or organoids), and omics-based studies to delineate the mechanisms driven by cellular components or metabolites of microbiota. These initial discoveries will need to be corroborated in humans before being developed as therapeutics (Figure 1).
Schematic summary of mechanisms underlying microbial modulation of GI physiology. The conventional, discovery-to-translation approach of studying microbial modulation of GI transit has focused on the effect of known bacterial metabolites, such as short-chain fatty acids and tryptophan metabolites (10–12); cell wall components like LPS; and bacterial functions such as transformation of primary bile acids, on the different cell types (7–9, 15, 16). In contrast, the Chen, Qiu, et al. study used a reverse translation approach, starting with patients diagnosed with IFC and identifying the microbial meditator DPA that prolonged GI transit. Similar to other metabolites, DPA likely alters GI transit by an effect on the enteric nervous system (17). SMCs, smooth muscle cells; 5-HT, serotonin; 5-HTR, serotonin receptor; CFTR, cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator;
Key findings have emerged from such discovery-to-translation studies. A comparison of GF and conventionally raised mice found that gut microbiota are important for the maintenance of mucosal enteric glial cells (6). LPS, an outer, surface component of Gram-negative bacteria, can affect enteric neuronal survival, increase mast cell degranulation, and influence GI motility by disrupting crosstalk between muscularis macrophages and neurons via the activation of the TLR4/NF-κB pathway (7–9). Fermentation of dietary nutrients results in microbial metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids, including butyrate, that can alter GI transit indirectly, by increasing the synthesis of serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; [5-HT]) (10, 11), or directly, by affecting cholinergic neurons in the myenteric plexus. Tryptamine, produced by the microbial decarboxylation of tryptophan, can facilitate GI transit by activating 5-HT4 receptors on intestinal epithelial cells and goblet cells, resulting in increased colonic secretion and mucus release (12, 13). Specific bile acids that enter the colon can increase colonic secretion and contractility; gut microbiota regulate the bile acid species in the colon by deconjugating as well as converting primary to secondary bile acids (14, 15). A recent study found that dietary components interact with the deconjugating capacity of gut microbiota to influence GI transit via a potential effect on enteric glia (16). These studies highlight mechanisms by which gut bacteria might influence GI transit. The next step should involve corroborating the findings in human studies (Figure 1).
In this issue of the JCI, Chen, Qiu, et al. (17) used a reverse translation approach to identify a bacterial strain and its product that are responsible for slowing GI transit. The authors focused on a patient population with slow GI transit that met Rome IV criteria for constipation and were being considered for surgical intervention after failing conventional medical treatment. They refer to these patients as having intractable functional constipation (IFC) and found the culture supernatant from Shigella sp. peristaltic contraction–inhibiting bacterium (PIB) isolated from these patients inhibited spontaneous, but not stimulated, contraction in ex vivo mouse colon and jejunum segments. The authors identified docosapentaenoic acid (DPA, an ω-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid [PUFA]) as the inhibitory metabolite produced by Shigella sp. PIB by separating the culture supernatant into polar and nonpolar phases followed by HPLC and LC-MS/MS. The inhibitory effect of DPA was verified in vitro and in vivo and further confirmed with a knockdown strain generated using a CRISPR interference system that targeted the ketoacyl synthase (KS) gene required for generating DPA. Mice colonized with the WT Shigella sp. PIB exhibited substantially longer GI transit time, reduced stool water, reduced frequency and amplitude of contraction in ex vivo colon segments, and reduced number of enteric glia when compared with noncolonized mice. Administration of strain-specific phages successfully eliminated the Shigella sp. PIB, reduced DPA levels in the stool, and accelerated GI transit time. Mice colonized with the KS knockdown strain (called PIB-KD) showed physiological activity similar to control mice, contrasting with the effects of the WT strain. These findings support a role for DPA in IFC. The authors extended these findings in a separate cohort to determine if the presence of the Shigella strain was restricted to IFC; they did not find this strain in the control groups (57 patients with ulcerative colitis, and 26 patients with self-diagnosed constipation but not IFC) (17). A similar reverse translation approach was used in a recent study wherein a role for microbiota-driven purine starvation was identified as a potential mechanism underlying IBS (18).
The discovery by Chen, Qiu, et al., that DPA production by a Shigella strain underlies the development of refractory constipation, will spur several lines of investigation. First, bacterial production of DPA is rare in the human gut and is predominantly a function of marine bacteria. It is intriguing to consider how these genes were acquired by this Shigella strain and if the associated function is prevalent in patients with refractory constipation across the globe. Second, while the authors found a decrease in enteric ganglia, the mechanism by which DPA exerts its effect on GI transit remains to be elucidated. The decrease in spontaneous contraction may be indicative of increased nitrergic neuronal signaling or of a loss of cholinergic neurons. Further, DPA may also affect the mucosa and submucosa; PUFAs have been found to exert biological effects on immune cells, adipocytes, and neuronal cells via GPR120 or GPR40 (19, 20). Third, dietary supplementation of PUFAs has been reported to modulate intestinal and neuronal activities via an effect on gut microbiota (21); Chen, Qiu, and associates found that even high doses of oral DPA had no effect on colonic function in mice, which may be due to proximal absorption in the small intestine, though the DPA levels in stool were not provided from this experiment (17). Alternately, the lack of response to oral DPA may indicate (a) different physiologic effects of dietary versus microbially derived DPA, or (b) the requirement of additional microbial cofactors.
The study by Chen, Qiu, et al. (17) supports a role for bacterially derived DPA in modulating GI transit and adds to the growing body of literature on the role of gut microbial metabolites in modulating GI physiology. This finding is exciting for both the microbiologists, as they investigate the acquisition of this unique function by gut-adapted bacteria, and for physiologists who will be keen to uncover the specific molecular mechanism underlying the effect of DPA. The reverse translation approach used by the authors, while difficult to execute, allows for more direct application in humans and should serve as a model for future investigations that strive to identify microbial mediators of diseases (17).
We thank Ruben Mars for his comments and suggestions. This work was supported by NIH grant DK114007 and the Center for Individualized Medicine, Mayo Clinic.
Address correspondence to: Purna C. Kashyap, Mayo Clinic, 200 First Street SW, Rochester, Minnesota 55905, USA. Phone: 507.293.7911; Email: Kashyap.purna@mayo.edu.
Conflict of interest: PCK is an ad hoc consultant for Pendulum Therapeutics, IP Group Inc., Novome Biotechnologies, and Intrinsic Medicine. PCK holds the patent US20170042860A1 “Methods and materials for using Ruminococcus gnavus or Clostridium sporogenes to treat gastrointestinal disorders” for use of tryptamine producing bacteria to treat gastrointestinal disorders. Mayo Clinic and PCK have a financial interest related to use of tryptamine-producing bacteria.
Copyright: © 2022, Xiao et al. This is an open access article published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Reference information: J Clin Invest. 2022;132(14):e161572. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI161572.
See the related article at A Shigella species variant is causally linked to intractable functional constipation .