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A surgical method for continuous intraportal infusion of gut microbial metabolites in mice
Danny Orabi, Lucas J. Osborn, Kevin Fung, William Massey, Anthony J. Horak III, Federico Aucejo, Ibrahim Choucair, Beckey DeLucia, Zeneng Wang, Jan Claesen, J. Mark Brown
Danny Orabi, Lucas J. Osborn, Kevin Fung, William Massey, Anthony J. Horak III, Federico Aucejo, Ibrahim Choucair, Beckey DeLucia, Zeneng Wang, Jan Claesen, J. Mark Brown
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Resource and Technical Advance Metabolism Microbiology

A surgical method for continuous intraportal infusion of gut microbial metabolites in mice

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Abstract

Gut microbe–derived metabolites influence human physiology and disease. However, establishing mechanistic links between gut microbial metabolites and disease pathogenesis in animal models remains challenging. The major route of absorption for microbe-derived small molecules is venous drainage via the portal vein to the liver. In the event of presystemic hepatic metabolism, the route of metabolite administration becomes critical. To our knowledge, we describe here a novel portal vein cannulation technique using a s.c. implanted osmotic pump to achieve continuous portal vein infusion in mice. We first administered the microbial metabolite trimethylamine (TMA) over 4 weeks, during which increased peripheral plasma levels of TMA and its host liver-derived cometabolite, trimethylamine-N-oxide, were observed when compared with a vehicle control. Next, 4-hydroxyphenylacetic acid (4-HPAA), a microbial metabolite that undergoes extensive presystemic hepatic metabolism, was administered intraportally to examine effects on hepatic gene expression. As expected, hepatic levels of 4-HPAA were elevated when compared with the control group while peripheral plasma 4-HPAA levels remained the same. Moreover, significant changes in the hepatic transcriptome were revealed by an unbiased RNA-Seq approach. Collectively, to our knowledge this work describes a novel method for administering gut microbe–derived metabolites via the portal vein, mimicking their physiologic delivery in vivo.

Authors

Danny Orabi, Lucas J. Osborn, Kevin Fung, William Massey, Anthony J. Horak III, Federico Aucejo, Ibrahim Choucair, Beckey DeLucia, Zeneng Wang, Jan Claesen, J. Mark Brown

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Figure 3

Ultrasound imaging of catheterized portal vein.

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Ultrasound imaging of catheterized portal vein.
Mice underwent ultrasoun...
Mice underwent ultrasound imaging 1 week after surgery (n = 3). (A) The portal vein proximal to the catheter appeared patent and nondilated, and (B) demonstrated liver-directed laminar flow on Doppler imaging. (C) The tip of the catheter was visualized within the distal portal vein (red arrow), and (D) liver-directed laminar flow was visualized around the catheter. (Orange star, liver; green arrow, portal vein; yellow arrow, hepatic artery; and blue arrow, inferior vena cava.)

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