Lecture 5 Flashcards

1
Q

what are glycans?

A

an umbrella term for polysaccharides, oligosaccharides and glycoconjugates, e.g. glycoproteins).

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2
Q

what produces butyrate, propionate and acetate?

A

butyrate- mainly Firmicutes
propionate- mainly Bacteroidetes
acetate- most gut bacteria

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3
Q

what do all 3 SCFAs stimulate?

A

anti-inflammatory pathways.

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4
Q

what does butyrate do?

A

its a main energy source of colonocytes.

anti-cancer, suppress cancer cell proliferation and induces apoptotic cell death.

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5
Q

what does propionate do?

A

maintains glucose homeostasis.

reduces apetite- means we don’t eat too much.

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6
Q

what does acetate do?

A

prevents colonisation by some pathogens (lowers ph)
increases butyrate production (x-feeding)
affects lipogenesis.

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7
Q

what is evidence that SCFAs are used by our bodies?

A

only 5% of the SCFAs made are found within the faeces.

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8
Q

what is IBD characterised by?

A

chronic inflammation- has genetic and dietary component.

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9
Q

what is a possible explanation of why ulcerative colitis is often found in the distal colon and rectum.

A

there’s lower levels of SCFA in the descending colon so SCFAs not dampening down inflammation here leading to UC.

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10
Q

why does the colon have a thick layer of mucus?

A

to protect underlying epithelial cells from infiltration by microbiota and pathogens. if infiltration occurs we get excess inflammation.

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11
Q

what is the mucus layer in the colon like?

A

transit slows down and microbe loads increase dramatically, there’s 2 discrete layers of mucus, a more sterile impenetrable layer which is surrounded by an outer layer.

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12
Q

in a study with germ-free mice, what happened when the mice were given a human microbiome and fed a low-fibre diet?

A

the microbes which were known to feed on mucin increased in population.

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13
Q

what happens when the mucin degrading bacterial population increases?

A

the mucus barrier gets finely degraded, pathogen can get across the barrier and cause disease.
chronic inflammation can be caused if microbial products or even intact bacteria translocate from the intestine into the systemic circulation.
barrier becomes dysfunctional.

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14
Q

so what re the two ways glycol metabolism is important for gut health?

A

production of SCFAs, protection of mucus barrier.

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15
Q

who are the main players in glycol breakdown in the gut?

A

Bacteroidetes are generalists, Firmicutes and Actinobacteria also play a significant role but are much more specialised.
Bacteroidetes have a wide range of glycans they can digest.

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16
Q

two common gut Bacteroides species were isolated from the gut, what could they break down?

A

they had distinct glycans they could break down, but together they could break down pretty much everything.

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17
Q

What were the preferences of B. ovatus and B. theta?

A

Ovatus likes plant polysaccharide, theta likes mucin glycan.

18
Q

what is PULs and what do they encode?

A

Polysaccharide utilisation loci, they encodes us-like systems.

19
Q

what is a sus-like system?

A

Starch utilisation system, because first characterised targeted starch, but each sus-like system targets a different glycan.

20
Q

What ares sus-like systems unique to?

A

Bacteroidetes.

21
Q

How many PULs does Bt have?

A

88

22
Q

what are PULs defined by?

A

homologues of susC/D as well as the presence of glycoside hydrolase genes + normally linked to sensor-regulator.

23
Q

why do Bacteroidetes need sus-like systems?

A

they’re gram negative so require this system to get things across the membrane for it to be broken down further.

24
Q

how do you know which PUL targets which glycan?

A

using transcriptomics of Bt and Bo growth on purified polysaccharide showed which PUL was activated in the presence of which polysaccharide.

25
Q

what are susC and susD?

A

susC is a transmembrane channel with susD associated with it.

26
Q

what is susD required for?

A

susD binds target glycan with low affinity and is required for oligosaccharides larger than 5 sugars.
suggests role of susD is to deliver larger oligos to susC transporter but it is not known how.

27
Q

how do we know that susD is important for oligosaccharides with more than 5 sugars?

A

when susD was knocked out, there was no effect on smaller sugars, but over 5 sugars the pore could no ,longer import larger sugars.

28
Q

what was recently discovered about the susCD structure?

A

susD sits on susC like a lid.

29
Q

what happens to susCD when a ligand is present and absent?

A

when ligand present, susD closes to keep the ligand within the structure, when ligand is absent, sus D opens to allow ligand in.

30
Q

what is susE?

A

it is part of CD complex on surface (lipoprotein)

31
Q

what’s the role of susE?

A

it binds glycans with a high affinity. its often called surface glycan binding protein (SGBP).

32
Q

what happens if you knock out susE from the starch PUL?

A

The SGBP gene knockout shows no growth defect on starch, but a defect appears if the knockout has to compete against WT.
it suggests that the role of SGBP is in glycan capture, and it provides a competitive advantage in a densely populated gut.

33
Q

why do almost all sus-like systems have surface located endo acting glycanase enzyme?

A

there’s a size-limit for import by susCD- need surface enzyme to digest long polysaccharides to oligosaccharides.

34
Q

how is glycan degradation by firmicutes different?

A

firmicutes generally have lower numbers of GHs and PLs than Bacteroidetes, which suggests that they’re more specialised.
firmicutes are gram positive, so no outermsmbrane to cross- just a thick peptidoglycan layer instead.

35
Q

what transporters do firmicutes have instead of susCD?

A

ABC transporters.

36
Q

what are ABC transporters?

A

cell wall anchored glyconases with lots of carbohydrate binding molecules to attach to substrate.

37
Q

what are some firmicutes (especially Ruminococci) associated with?

A

insoluble fibre particles in faecal samples.

38
Q

what are Bacteroidetes associated with more?

A

the liquid phase (soluble poly and oligosaccharides.)

39
Q

what are Bifidobacteria?

A

Actinobacteria gram positive.

40
Q

how do bifidobacterias break down glycans?

A

they use similar apparatus to firmicutes, ABC transporters and surface enzymes (GH), enzymes are less complex than in firmicutes. maybe because Bifidobacteria prefers to use oligosaccharides rather than the insoluble molecules firmicutes target.