1887

Abstract

Several hydrolytic and reductive bacterial enzymes (β-glucuronidase, GN; β-glucosidase, GS; arylsulphatase, AS; azoreductase, AR; nitroreductase, NR) involved in production of mutagenic or genotoxic metabolites were measured in human colonic contents. Cell-associated AS and extracellular GS were approximately twice as high in the distal colon compared with the proximal bowel, while AR changed little throughout the gut. Measurements of these enzymes in faeces from seven healthy donors confirmed that the majority were cell-associated, and demonstrated high levels of inter-individual variability. NR decreased four-fold between the proximal and distal colon while extracellular GN was reduced by 50%. Most probable number (MPN) analysis on faeces obtained from six healthy donors showed that counts of intestinal bacteria producing GS and AR were . 10 and 10/g, respectively, in all samples tested. Numbers of GN- and AS-forming organisms were between two and three orders of magnitude lower. Inter-individual carriage rates of bacterial populations synthesising NR were highly variable. Screening of 20 pure cultures of intestinal bacteria, belonging to six different genera, showed that , in particular, synthesised large amounts of GS, whereas formed the highest cell-associated levels of GN. In general, bifidobacteria and did not produce significant amounts of AR. All five clostridia studied ( and ) produced NR and AR, as did the bacteroides ( and ). and formed large amounts of NR. Levels of AS production were invariably low and few of the organisms screened synthesised this enzyme. In-vitro studies investigating the effect of intestinal transit time on enzyme production, in a three-stage (V1–V3) continuous culture model of the colon operated at system retention times (R) of either 31.1 or 68.4 h, showed that specific activities of GS were up to four-fold higher (V3) at R = 31.1 h. Bacteriological analysis demonstrated that representative populations of colonic micro-organisms were maintained in the fermentation system, and indicated that changes in GS activity were not related to numbers of the predominant anaerobic or facultative anaerobic species within the model, but were explainable on the basis of substrate-induced modulation of bacterial metabolism.

Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journal/jmm/10.1099/00222615-47-5-407
1998-05-01
2024-04-19
Loading full text...

Full text loading...

/deliver/fulltext/jmm/47/5/medmicro-47-5-407.html?itemId=/content/journal/jmm/10.1099/00222615-47-5-407&mimeType=html&fmt=ahah
http://instance.metastore.ingenta.com/content/journal/jmm/10.1099/00222615-47-5-407
Loading
/content/journal/jmm/10.1099/00222615-47-5-407
Loading

Data & Media loading...

This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error