1. Academic Validation
  2. Impact of drugs and environmental contaminants on amine production by gut bacteria

Impact of drugs and environmental contaminants on amine production by gut bacteria

  • Mol Syst Biol. 2025 Jun 30. doi: 10.1038/s44320-025-00130-4.
Stephan Kamrad 1 Tara F Davis 1 Kiran R Patil 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 The Medical Research Council Toxicology Unit and Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
  • 2 The Medical Research Council Toxicology Unit and Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK. kp533@cam.ac.uk.
Abstract

Xenobiotics like drugs are recognised as key influencers of gut Bacterial growth. Yet, their impact on the production of metabolites involved in microbiota-host interactions is largely unknown. Here, we report the impact of commonly ingested xenobiotics-therapeutic drugs, pesticides, industrial chemicals, and sweeteners-on gut Bacterial amine metabolism. We tested >13,000 interactions between >1700 compounds and 4 amine-producing bacteria, uncovering 747 xenobiotic-species-metabolite interactions involving 275 compounds. These compounds span all tested classes, with the majority being antimicrobial drugs. In 66% of the cases, amine production was correlated with growth, while the rest showed xenobiotic-induced decoupling between growth and metabolite production. The latter includes transient bursts in polyamine production by Escherichia coli in response to β-lactam Antibiotics, and overproduction of aromatic amines by Ruminococcus gnavus treated with 15 diverse chemicals. Xenobiotics thus can disrupt metabolic homeostasis in both growth-dependent and -independent manner. We also find that metabolic responses have non-monotonic dose-dependency, resulting in lower doses sometimes having stronger effects. Our results bring forward the potential of common xenobiotics to disrupt the amine metabolism of gut bacteria.

Keywords

Microbiome; Pesticides; Polyamines; Stress Response; Xenobiotics.

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