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Metabolism of Daidzein and Genistein by Gut Bacteria of the Class Coriobacteriia

The intake of isoflavones is presumed to be associated with health benefits in humans, but also potential adverse effects of isoflavones are controversially discussed. Isoflavones can be metabolized by gut bacteria leading to modulation of the bioactivity, such as estrogenic effects. Especially bact...

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Autores principales: Soukup, Sebastian Tobias, Stoll, Dominic Alexander, Danylec, Nicolas, Schoepf, Alena, Kulling, Sabine Emma, Huch, Melanie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8618169/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34829025
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods10112741
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author Soukup, Sebastian Tobias
Stoll, Dominic Alexander
Danylec, Nicolas
Schoepf, Alena
Kulling, Sabine Emma
Huch, Melanie
author_facet Soukup, Sebastian Tobias
Stoll, Dominic Alexander
Danylec, Nicolas
Schoepf, Alena
Kulling, Sabine Emma
Huch, Melanie
author_sort Soukup, Sebastian Tobias
collection PubMed
description The intake of isoflavones is presumed to be associated with health benefits in humans, but also potential adverse effects of isoflavones are controversially discussed. Isoflavones can be metabolized by gut bacteria leading to modulation of the bioactivity, such as estrogenic effects. Especially bacterial strains of the Eggerthellaceae, a well-known bacterial family of the human gut microbiota, are able to convert the isoflavone daidzein into equol. In addition, metabolization of genistein is also described for strains of the Eggerthellaceae. The aim of this study was to identify and investigate gut bacterial strains of the family Eggerthellaceae as well as the narrowly related family Coriobacteriaceae which are able to metabolize daidzein and genistein. This study provides a comprehensive, polyphasic approach comprising in silico analysis of the equol gene cluster, detection of genes associated with the daidzein, and genistein metabolism via PCR and fermentation of these isoflavones. The in silico search for protein sequences that are associated with daidzein metabolism identified sequences with high similarity values in already well-known equol-producing strains. Furthermore, protein sequences that are presumed to be associated with daidzein and genistein metabolism were detected in the two type strains ‘Hugonella massiliensis’ and Senegalimassilia faecalis which were not yet described to metabolize these isoflavones. An alignment of these protein sequences showed that the equol gene cluster is highly conserved. In addition, PCR amplification supported the presence of genes associated with daidzein and genistein metabolism. Furthermore, the metabolism of daidzein and genistein was investigated in fermentations of pure bacterial cultures under strictly anaerobic conditions and proofed the metabolism of daidzein and genistein by the strains ‘Hugonella massiliensis’ DSM 101782(T) and Senegalimassilia faecalis KGMB04484(T).
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spelling pubmed-86181692021-11-27 Metabolism of Daidzein and Genistein by Gut Bacteria of the Class Coriobacteriia Soukup, Sebastian Tobias Stoll, Dominic Alexander Danylec, Nicolas Schoepf, Alena Kulling, Sabine Emma Huch, Melanie Foods Article The intake of isoflavones is presumed to be associated with health benefits in humans, but also potential adverse effects of isoflavones are controversially discussed. Isoflavones can be metabolized by gut bacteria leading to modulation of the bioactivity, such as estrogenic effects. Especially bacterial strains of the Eggerthellaceae, a well-known bacterial family of the human gut microbiota, are able to convert the isoflavone daidzein into equol. In addition, metabolization of genistein is also described for strains of the Eggerthellaceae. The aim of this study was to identify and investigate gut bacterial strains of the family Eggerthellaceae as well as the narrowly related family Coriobacteriaceae which are able to metabolize daidzein and genistein. This study provides a comprehensive, polyphasic approach comprising in silico analysis of the equol gene cluster, detection of genes associated with the daidzein, and genistein metabolism via PCR and fermentation of these isoflavones. The in silico search for protein sequences that are associated with daidzein metabolism identified sequences with high similarity values in already well-known equol-producing strains. Furthermore, protein sequences that are presumed to be associated with daidzein and genistein metabolism were detected in the two type strains ‘Hugonella massiliensis’ and Senegalimassilia faecalis which were not yet described to metabolize these isoflavones. An alignment of these protein sequences showed that the equol gene cluster is highly conserved. In addition, PCR amplification supported the presence of genes associated with daidzein and genistein metabolism. Furthermore, the metabolism of daidzein and genistein was investigated in fermentations of pure bacterial cultures under strictly anaerobic conditions and proofed the metabolism of daidzein and genistein by the strains ‘Hugonella massiliensis’ DSM 101782(T) and Senegalimassilia faecalis KGMB04484(T). MDPI 2021-11-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8618169/ /pubmed/34829025 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods10112741 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Soukup, Sebastian Tobias
Stoll, Dominic Alexander
Danylec, Nicolas
Schoepf, Alena
Kulling, Sabine Emma
Huch, Melanie
Metabolism of Daidzein and Genistein by Gut Bacteria of the Class Coriobacteriia
title Metabolism of Daidzein and Genistein by Gut Bacteria of the Class Coriobacteriia
title_full Metabolism of Daidzein and Genistein by Gut Bacteria of the Class Coriobacteriia
title_fullStr Metabolism of Daidzein and Genistein by Gut Bacteria of the Class Coriobacteriia
title_full_unstemmed Metabolism of Daidzein and Genistein by Gut Bacteria of the Class Coriobacteriia
title_short Metabolism of Daidzein and Genistein by Gut Bacteria of the Class Coriobacteriia
title_sort metabolism of daidzein and genistein by gut bacteria of the class coriobacteriia
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8618169/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34829025
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods10112741
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