Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy (Jun 2024)

Gut microbiota mediates the protective effects of β-hydroxybutyrate against cisplatin-induced acute kidney injury

  • Ruixue Tian,
  • Xingru Wang,
  • Shuqin Tang,
  • Limei Zhao,
  • Yajie Hao,
  • Rongshan Li,
  • Xiaoshuang Zhou

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 175
p. 116752

Abstract

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The gut microbiota has been reported to be perturbed by chemotherapeutic agents and to modulate side effects. However, the critical role of β-hydroxybutyrate (BHB) in the regulation of the gut microbiota and the pathogenesis of chemotherapeutic agents related nephrotoxicity remains unknown. We conducted a comparative analysis of the composition and function of gut microbiota in healthy, cisplatin-challenged, BHB-treated, and high-fat diet-treated mice using 16 S rDNA gene sequencing. To understand the crucial involvement of intestinal flora in BHB's regulation of cisplatin -induced nephrotoxicity, we administered antibiotics to deplete the gut microbiota and performed fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) before cisplatin administration. 16 S rDNA gene sequencing analysis demonstrated that both endogenous and exogenous BHB restored gut microbiota dysbiosis and cisplatin-induced intestinal barrier disruption in mice. Additionally, our findings suggested that the LPS/TLR4/NF-κB pathway was responsible for triggering renal inflammation in the gut-kidney axis. Furthermore, the ablation of the gut microbiota ablation using antibiotics eliminated the renoprotective effects of BHB against cisplatin-induced acute kidney injury. FMT also confirmed that administration of BHB-treated gut microbiota provided protection against cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity. This study elucidated the mechanism by which BHB affects the gut microbiota mediation of cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity by inhibiting the inflammatory response, which may help develop novel therapeutic approaches that target the composition of the microbiota.

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