Litcius/Paper detail

<i>Collinsella aerofaciens</i> Produces a pH-Responsive Lipid Immunogen

Jaeyoung Kwon, Munhyung Bae, Dávid Szamosvári, Chelsi D. Cassilly, Andrew S. Bolze, David R. Jackson, Ramnik J. Xavier, Jon Clardy

2023Journal of the American Chemical Society34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

High Resolution Image Download MS PowerPoint Slide Some members of the human gut microbiota profoundly influence their host’s physiology, health, and therapeutic responses, but the responsible molecules and mechanisms are largely unknown. As part of a project to identify immunomodulators produced by gut microbes, we analyzed the metabolome of Collinsella aerofaciens, an actinomycete that figures prominently in numerous association studies. The associations are typically positive correlations of C. aerofaciens with pro-inflammatory responses and undesirable outcomes, but an association with favorable responses to PD-1/PD-L1 cancer immunotherapy is a notable exception. A phenotypic assay-guided screen using dendritic cells (mBMDCs) and cytokine readouts identified the active compound, which was structurally characterized as a lysoglycoglycerolipid with an acetal-bearing β-galactofuranose head group (CaLGL-1, 1 ). The structural assignment was confirmed through total synthesis. Assays with tlr2 –/–, tlr4 –/–, and wt mBMDCs revealed TLR2-dependent signaling. CaLGL-1 is produced by a conversion of a bacterially biosynthesized plasmalogen (CaPlsM, 3 ) to CaLGL-1 ( 1 ) in a low-pH environment.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryTLR2ImmunogenGut floraMetabolomeTLR4BiochemistryImmunologySignal transductionMetaboliteBiologyAntibodyMonoclonal antibodyImmune Response and InflammationImmune cells in cancerCancer Research and Treatments