微生物群
食欲
氨基酸
生物
亮氨酸
受体
细胞生物学
生物化学
内科学
内分泌学
遗传学
医学
作者
Boram Kim,Makoto I. Kanai,Yangkyun Oh,Minsoo Kyung,Eunkyoung Kim,In-Hwan Jang,Jihoon Lee,Sang‐Gyu Kim,Greg S. B. Suh,Won‐Jae Lee
出处
期刊:Nature
[Springer Nature]
日期:2021-05-05
卷期号:593 (7860): 570-574
被引量:83
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41586-021-03522-2
摘要
A balanced intake of macronutrients-protein, carbohydrate and fat-is essential for the well-being of organisms. An adequate calorific intake but with insufficient protein consumption can lead to several ailments, including kwashiorkor1. Taste receptors (T1R1-T1R3)2 can detect amino acids in the environment, and cellular sensors (Gcn2 and Tor)3 monitor the levels of amino acids in the cell. When deprived of dietary protein, animals select a food source that contains a greater proportion of protein or essential amino acids (EAAs)4. This suggests that food selection is geared towards achieving the target amount of a particular macronutrient with assistance of the EAA-specific hunger-driven response, which is poorly understood. Here we show in Drosophila that a microbiome-gut-brain axis detects a deficit of EAAs and stimulates a compensatory appetite for EAAs. We found that the neuropeptide CNMamide (CNMa)5 was highly induced in enterocytes of the anterior midgut during protein deprivation. Silencing of the CNMa-CNMa receptor axis blocked the EAA-specific hunger-driven response in deprived flies. Furthermore, gnotobiotic flies bearing an EAA-producing symbiotic microbiome exhibited a reduced appetite for EAAs. By contrast, gnotobiotic flies with a mutant microbiome that did not produce leucine or other EAAs showed higher expression of CNMa and a greater compensatory appetite for EAAs. We propose that gut enterocytes sense the levels of diet- and microbiome-derived EAAs and communicate the EAA-deprived condition to the brain through CNMa.
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