Intestinal permeability of N-acetylcysteine is driven by gut microbiota-dependent cysteine palmitoylation.

Journal: Nature communications
Published Date:

Abstract

Trillions of intestinal microbiota are essential to the permeability of orally administered drugs. However, identifying microbial-drug interactions remains challenging due to the highly variable composition of intestinal flora among individuals. Using single-pass intestinal perfusion (SPIP) platform, we establish the microbiota-based permeability screening framework involving germ-free (GF) and specific-pathogen-free (SPF) rats to compare in-situ P-values and metabolomic profiles of 32 orally administered drugs with disputable classifications of permeability, prior to the verifications of bioorthogonal chemistry and LC-MS/MS. In contrast with SPF controls, N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) exhibits significantly increased permeability in GF rats, which is inversely related to reduced cysteine-3-ketosphinganine by Bacteroides. To further validate these microbiome features, we integrate clinical descriptors from a prospective cohort of 319 participants to optimize a 15-feature eXtreme Gradient Boosting (XGB) model, which reveal that cysteine palmitoylation by intestinal microbiota has significantly affected NAC permeability. By comparison of net reclassification improvement (NRI) index, this machine learning (ML) model of clinical prediction model encompassing intestinal microbial features outperforms other three commercial models in predicting NAC permeability. Here we have developed an intestinal microbiota-based strategy to evaluate uncharacterized NAC permeability, thus accounting for its discordant biopharmaceutics classification.

Authors

  • Yu-Hang Zhang
    Institute of Health Sciences, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200031, China.
  • Chen-Shu Dai
    Institute of Clinical Pharmacology, Peking University First Hospital, 100191, Beijing, China.
  • Ya-Jie Wang
    Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, Peking University First Hospital, 100034, Beijing, China.
  • Wen-Yu Wang
    Beijing Anzhen Hospital, Capital Medical University, 100029, Beijing, China.
  • Tian-Tian Qi
    Institute of Clinical Pharmacology, Peking University First Hospital, 100191, Beijing, China.
  • Man-Cheng Xia
    Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, Peking University First Hospital, 100034, Beijing, China.
  • Gan Zhou
    Department of Pharmacy, Xiangya Hospital of Central South University, Changsha, 410008, China. zhougan77@163.com.
  • Yi-Min Cui
    Institute of Clinical Pharmacology, Peking University First Hospital, 100191, Beijing, China. cui.pharm@pkufh.com.