Journal Article10.1152/ajpgi.00306.2023
Oral tryptophan activates duodenal aryl hydrocarbon receptor in healthy subjects: a crossover randomized controlled trial.
Gaston Rueda,Natalia Causada-Calo,Rajka Borojevic,Andrea Nardelli,Maria Ines Pinto-Sanchez,Marco Constante,Josie Libertucci,Vidhyalakshmi Mohan,Philippe Langella,Linda M. P. Loonen,Jerry M Wells,Harry Sokol,Elena F. Verdu,Premysl Bercik +13 more
- 09 Apr 2024
5
TL;DR: Oral tryptophan supplementation in humans induces microbial indole and host kynurenine metabolic pathways in the small intestine, known to be immunomodulatory.
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Abstract: Background and Aims: Tryptophan is an essential amino acid transformed by host and gut microbial enzymes into metabolites that regulate mucosal homeostasis through Aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) activation. Alteration of tryptophan metabolism has been associated with chronic inflammation, however whether tryptophan supplementation affects the metabolite repertoire and AhR activation under physiologic conditions in humans, is unknown. Methods: We performed a randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study in 20 healthy volunteers. Subjects on a low tryptophan background diet were randomly assigned to a 3-week L-tryptophan supplementation (3 g/day) or placebo, and after a 2-week washout switched to opposite interventions. We assessed gastrointestinal and psychological symptoms by validated questionnaires, AhR activation by cell reporter assay, tryptophan metabolites by liquid chromatography and high-resolution mass spectrometry, cytokine production in isolated monocytes by ELISA and microbiota profile by 16S rRNA Illumina technique. Results: Oral tryptophan supplementation was well tolerated, with no changes in gastrointestinal or psychological scores. Compared with placebo, tryptophan increased AhR activation capacity by duodenal contents, but not by feces. This was paralleled by higher urinary and plasma kynurenine metabolites and indoles. Tryptophan had a modest impact on fecal microbiome profiles, and no significant effect on cytokine production. Conclusions: At the doses used in this study, oral tryptophan supplementation in humans induces microbial indole and host kynurenine metabolic pathways in the small intestine, known to be immunomodulatory. The results should prompt tryptophan intervention strategies in inflammatory conditions of the small intestine where the AhR pathway is impaired.
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Citations
Targeting the Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor: The Potential of Indole Compounds in the Treatment of Cystic Fibrosis
Sen Hou,Qingkun Yue,Xia Hou,Qingtian Wu +3 more
TL;DR: This study investigates the potential of indole compounds to treat cystic fibrosis by activating the aryl hydrocarbon receptor, regulating pulmonary infection and inflammation, and repairing intestinal barrier function, offering a novel therapeutic approach.
Metabolic modeling reveals a multi-level deregulation of host-microbiome metabolic networks in IBD
J. Taubenheim,A. S. Kadibalban,Johannes Zimmermann,Claudia Taubenheim,Florian Tran,Philip Rosenstiel,Konrad Aden,Christoph Kaleta +7 more
TL;DR: This study uses metabolic modeling to reveal multi-level deregulation of host-microbiome networks in IBD, identifying concomitant changes in NAD, amino acid, and phospholipid metabolism, and predicting dietary interventions to restore metabolic homeostasis.
Harnessing aryl hydrocarbon receptor dynamics: Unveiling therapeutic pathways in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma
Chun‐Han Cheng,Wen‐Rui Hao,Tzu‐Hurng Cheng +2 more
TL;DR: This editorial highlights the aryl hydrocarbon receptor's role in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma development and progression, emphasizing its potential as a therapeutic target, and discusses its modulation's influence on immune responses and tumor microenvironment.
Dietary tryptophan enhances aryl hydrocarbon receptor activation and reduces colitis through microbial metabolism
L Rondeau,B Barbosa da Luz,Dominic Haas,Pranshu Muppidi,X Wang,Rebecca Dang,Gaston Rueda,Andrea Nardelli,Giada De Palma,Harry Sokol,Přemysl Berčík,Alberto Caminero +11 more
- 01 Sep 2025
TL;DR: Dietary tryptophan supplementation enhances aryl hydrocarbon receptor activation and reduces colitis severity in preclinical models by restoring microbial tryptophan metabolism, suggesting a therapeutic potential for targeting microbial metabolism in inflammatory bowel disease management.
Minibioreactor arrays to model microbiome response to alcohol and tryptophan in the context of alcohol-associated liver disease
Wanchao Hu,Sabrine Naimi,Nicolas Trainel,Vanessa Liévin‐Le Moal,Gabriel Perlemuter,Benoît Chassaing,Dragos Ciocan,Anne‐Marie Cassard +7 more
TL;DR: Researchers used Minibioreactor arrays to model microbiome response to alcohol and tryptophan in patients with alcohol-associated liver disease, finding that normal tryptophan levels may prevent dysbiosis, while high and low levels increase pathogen abundance.
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