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Understanding the hepatoxicity of inorganic mercury through guts: Perturbance to gut microbiota, alteration of gut-liver axis related metabolites and damage to gut integrity

Xiaoying Lin, Wei Zhang, Lina He, Hongxin Xie, Bo Feng, Heyun Zhu, Jiating Zhao, Liwei Cui, Li Bai, Yufeng Li

2021Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mercury (Hg) brings adverse effects to the environment and human beings and inorganic mercury (IHg) is a typical hepatic toxin. This work studied the impacts of IHg on gut microbes and metabolome together with its damage to liver and gut in rats through gut microbiome, metabolomics and metallomics. Sprague Dawley (SD) rats were orally exposed to 0.4 μg/mL IHg and sacrificed after 24 h. It was found that IHg perturbed greatly on the gut microbiota, such as increased pathogenic bacteria like G. bacillus. In addition, IHg also changed gut-liver axis related metabolites, which was confirmed by the secretion of a large number of inflammatory factors in both the gut and the liver. The changed gut-liver axis related metabolites correlated well to the changes of gut microbiome. In all, besides the direct deposition in liver of Hg, the perturbance to gut microbiome and alteration of gut-liver axis related metabolites by IHg also contributed to its hepatoxicity, which provides new insights about the hepatoxicity of chemicals. The strategy applied in this work may also be used to understand the hepatoxicity of other chemicals.

Topics & Concepts

MetabolomeGut floraGut microbiomeBiologyMercury (programming language)MetabolomicsMicrobiomeGut bacteriaMicrobiologyBiochemistryBioinformaticsComputer scienceProgramming languageDrug Transport and Resistance MechanismsCannabis and Cannabinoid ResearchHeavy Metal Exposure and Toxicity