AI Article Synopsis

  • Research suggests that gut microbial imbalance (dysbiosis) contributes to the worsening of chronic kidney disease (CKD), but there is currently no effective treatment available.
  • A specific bacteria, Lactobacillus johnsonii, is linked to CKD progression; its levels decrease in CKD cases, and supplementation with this bacteria improved kidney damage in animal studies.
  • The study finds that a compound called indole-3-aldehyde (IAld), which correlates with kidney health, can help protect against kidney damage by interacting with specific cellular pathways, suggesting that increasing levels of L. johnsonii may offer new treatment options for CKD patients.

Article Abstract

Accumulated evidence suggested that gut microbial dysbiosis interplayed with progressive chronic kidney disease (CKD). However, no available therapy is effective in suppressing progressive CKD. Here, using microbiomics in 480 participants including healthy controls and patients with stage 1-5 CKD, we identified an elongation taxonomic chain Bacilli-Lactobacillales-Lactobacillaceae-Lactobacillus-Lactobacillus johnsonii correlated with patients with CKD progression, whose abundance strongly correlated with clinical kidney markers. L. johnsonii abundance reduced with progressive CKD in rats with adenine-induced CKD. L. johnsonii supplementation ameliorated kidney lesion. Serum indole-3-aldehyde (IAld), whose level strongly negatively correlated with creatinine level in CKD rats, decreased in serum of rats induced using unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO) and 5/6 nephrectomy (NX) as well as late CKD patients. Treatment with IAld dampened kidney lesion through suppressing aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) signal in rats with CKD or UUO, and in cultured 1-hydroxypyrene-induced HK-2 cells. Renoprotective effect of IAld was partially diminished in AHR deficiency mice and HK-2 cells. Our further data showed that treatment with L. johnsonii attenuated kidney lesion by suppressing AHR signal via increasing serum IAld level. Taken together, targeting L. johnsonii might reverse patients with CKD. This study provides a deeper understanding of how microbial-produced tryptophan metabolism affects host disease and discovers potential pathways for prophylactic and therapeutic treatments for CKD patients.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11298530PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41392-024-01913-1DOI Listing

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