A Small-Molecule
Inhibitor of Gut Bacterial Urease
Protects the Host from Liver Injury
Posted on 2025-01-09 - 00:45
Hyperammonemia is characterized by the accumulation of
ammonia
within the bloodstream upon liver injury. Left untreated, hyperammonemia
contributes to conditions such as hepatic encephalopathy that have
high rates of patient morbidity and mortality. Previous studies have
identified gut bacterial urease, an enzyme that converts urea into
ammonia, as a major contributor to systemic ammonia levels. Here,
we demonstrate use of benurestat, a clinical candidate used against
ureolytic organisms in encrusted uropathy, to inhibit urease activity
in gut bacteria. Benurestat inhibits ammonia production by urease-encoding
gut bacteria and is effective against individual microbes and complex
gut microbiota. When administered to conventional mice with liver
injury induced by thioacetamide exposure, benurestat reduced gut and
serum ammonia levels and rescued 100% of mice from lethal acute liver
injury. Overall, this study provides an important proof-of-concept
for modulating host ammonia levels and microbiota-driven risks for
hyperammonemia with gut microbiota-targeted small-molecule inhibitors.
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Richards-Corke, Khyle
C.; Jiang, Yindi; Yeliseyev, Vladimir; Zhang, Yancong; Franzosa, Eric A.; Wang, Zhipeng A.; et al. (2025). A Small-Molecule
Inhibitor of Gut Bacterial Urease
Protects the Host from Liver Injury. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acschembio.3c00556Â