Human gut Bacteroides capture vitamin B12 via cell surface-exposed lipoproteins

2018 
Eating is the first step in an hours-long process that extracts the nutrients we need to live. It not only nourishes us, but also a vast community of bacteria in our gut called the microbiota. The gut microbiota acts like an extension of our immune system and helps us stay healthy in many ways. For example, it blocks pathogens from making us sick. But too many gut bacteria in the wrong parts of our intestines can be harmful. Some people are prone to developing a dangerous overgrowth of bacteria in their small intestine where most of our dietary nutrients get absorbed. This overgrowth can lead to many problems including vitamin B12 deficiency even when they eat plenty of it. To understand why, scientists must learn how microbes affect our ability to absorb nutrients from food and how the microbes themselves capture nutrients like vitamin B12 as they pass through our digestive tract. Now, Wexler et al. show that some gut microbes may be able to pirate vitamin B12 from us as it passes through the digestive tract. Wexler et al. showed that a protein called BtuG on the surface of a type of gut bacteria called Bacteriodes grabs onto vitamin B12 with extraordinary strength. In fact, these bacterial proteins bind to vitamin B12 so strongly that they can even pry it away from our own vitamin B12 collecting protein. When Bacteriodes with and without BtuG were placed in mice with no gut bacteria of their own, bacteria with BtuG rapidly outcompeted those lacking the protein. The experiments suggest that competition for vitamin B12 among microbes has favored bacteria that are better at capturing the nutrient. More studies are needed to learn whether BtuG contributes to vitamin B12 deficiencies in humans with gut bacteria overgrowth and determine the best ways to combat such deficiencies.
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