Abstract

Flavonoids are a major group of dietary plant polyphenols and have a positive health impact, but their modification and degradation in the human gut is still widely unknown. Due to the rise of metagenome data of the human gut microbiome and the assembly of hundreds of thousands of bacterial metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs), large-scale screening for potential flavonoid-modifying enzymes of human gut bacteria is now feasible. With sequences of characterized flavonoid-transforming enzymes as queries, the Unified Human Gastrointestinal Protein catalog was analyzed and genes encoding putative flavonoid-modifying enzymes were quantified. The results revealed that flavonoid-modifying enzymes are often encoded in gut bacteria hitherto not considered to modify flavonoids. The enzymes for the physiologically important daidzein-to-equol conversion, well studied in Slackia isoflavoniconvertens, were encoded only to a minor extent in Slackia MAGs, but were more abundant in Adlercreutzia equolifaciens and an uncharacterized Eggerthellaceae species. In addition, enzymes with a sequence identity of about 35% were encoded in highly abundant MAGs of uncultivated Collinsella species, which suggests a hitherto uncharacterized daidzein-to-equol potential in these bacteria. Of all potential flavonoid modification steps, O-deglycosylation (including derhamnosylation) was by far the most abundant in this analysis. In contrast, enzymes putatively involved in C-deglycosylation were detected less often in human gut bacteria and mainly found in Agathobacter faecis (formerly Roseburia faecis). Homologs to phloretin hydrolase, flavanonol/flavanone-cleaving reductase and flavone reductase were of intermediate abundance (several hundred MAGs) and mainly prevalent in Flavonifractor plautii. This first comprehensive insight into the black box of flavonoid modification in the human gut highlights many hitherto overlooked and uncultured bacterial genera and species as potential key organisms in flavonoid modification. This could lead to a significant contribution to future biochemical-microbiological investigations on gut bacterial flavonoid transformation. In addition, our results are important for individual nutritional recommendations and for biotechnological applications that rely on novel enzymes catalyzing potentially useful flavonoid modification reactions.

Highlights

  • O-deglycosylation was the most abundant flavonoid modification performed by human gut bacteria (31 strains)

  • A. hadrus, containing only flavanonol-cleaving reductase (Fcr) and Phloretin hydrolase (Phy), showed onl minor amount of metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) carrying flavonoid-degrading enzymes

  • The in silico analysis of potential flavonoid-modifying enzymes of human gut bacteria presented here is a first step to uncover the complete picture of flavonoid transformation in the human intestine

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Summary

Introduction

Flavonoids, which are exclusively plant secondary metabolites, are considered to bear many beneficial effects on health [1,2,3,4,5] and are assumed to contribute especially to a lower cardiovascular disease and cancer-related mortality [6,7]. Most flavonoids are taken up as a part of the human diet mainly as glycosides. A portion of dietary flavonoids is absorbed in the small intestine following O-deglycosylation by epithelial enzymes. Flavonoid aglycons undergo phase I/II transformation [8,9,10]. The major part of dietary flavonoids (or their phase I/II metabolites) reach the large intestine, where they are subject to transformation by gut bacteria which can enhance or lower their bioavailability and biological activtity [11,12,13,14].

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