Pharmacological hypothesis: A recombinant probiotic for taming bacterial β-glucuronidase in drug-induced enteropathy
Publication date
2022-09-09
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Abstract
Advances in pharmacomicrobiomics have shed light on the pathophysiology of drug-induced enteropathy associated with the therapeutic use of certain non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, anticancer chemotherapies and immunosuppressants. The toxicity pathway results from the post-glucuronidation release and digestive accumulation of an aglycone generated in the context of intestinal dysbiosis characterized by the expansion of β-glucuronidase-expressing bacteria. The active aglycone could trigger direct or indirect inflammatory signaling on the gut epithelium. Therefore, taming bacterial β-glucuronidase (GUS) activity is a druggable target for preventing drug-induced enteropathy. In face of the limitations of antibiotic strategies that can worsen intestinal dysbiosis and impair immune functions, we hereby propose the use of a recombinant probiotic capable of mimicking repressive conditions of GUS through an inducible plasmid vector.
Keywords
bacterial β-glucuronidase, drug-induced enteropathy, gut microbiome, intestinal dysbiosis, pharmacomicrobiomics, recombinant probiotic
Citation
Jardou, M, Brossier, C, Kenza, G, Faucher, Q & Lawson, R 2022, 'Pharmacological hypothesis: A recombinant probiotic for taming bacterial β-glucuronidase in drug-induced enteropathy', Pharmacology Research and Perspectives, vol. 10, no. 5, e00998, pp. 1-7. https://doi.org/10.1002/prp2.998