Colonic contribution to uremic solutes

Pavel A Aronov, Frank J-G Luo, Natalie S Plummer, Zhe Quan, Susan Holmes, Thomas H Hostetter, Timothy W Meyer, Pavel A Aronov, Frank J-G Luo, Natalie S Plummer, Zhe Quan, Susan Holmes, Thomas H Hostetter, Timothy W Meyer

Abstract

Microbes in the colon produce compounds, normally excreted by the kidneys, which are potential uremic toxins. Although p-cresol sulfate and indoxyl sulfate are well studied examples, few other compounds are known. Here, we compared plasma from hemodialysis patients with and without colons to identify and further characterize colon-derived uremic solutes. HPLC confirmed the colonic origin of p-cresol sulfate and indoxyl sulfate, but levels of hippurate, methylamine, and dimethylamine were not significantly lower in patients without colons. High-resolution mass spectrometry detected more than 1000 features in predialysis plasma samples. Hierarchical clustering based on these features clearly separated dialysis patients with and without colons. Compared with patients with colons, we identified more than 30 individual features in patients without colons that were either absent or present in lower concentration. Almost all of these features were more prominent in plasma from dialysis patients than normal subjects, suggesting that they represented uremic solutes. We used a panel of indole and phenyl standards to identify five colon-derived uremic solutes: α-phenylacetyl-l-glutamine, 5-hydroxyindole, indoxyl glucuronide, p-cresol sulfate, and indoxyl sulfate. However, compounds with accurate mass values matching most of the colon-derived solutes could not be found in standard metabolomic databases. These results suggest that colonic microbes may produce an important portion of uremic solutes, most of which remain unidentified.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Clustering identified the six patients with colectomies and the nine patients with intact colons as belonging to different groups. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering was performed on the distances calculated from the sum of the squared differences between the log-transformed amplitudes of 1055 features detected by MS in predialysis plasma samples from the 15 hemodialysis patients. Distances along the vertical axis provide an index of the aggregate differences in feature amplitudes between individual patients and groups of patients.

Source: PubMed

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