Discovery of Drug Candidates for Specific Human Disease Based on Natural Products of Gut Microbes

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Abstract

The beneficial metabolites of the microbiome could be used as a tool for screening drugs that have the potential for the therapy of various human diseases. Narrowing down the range of beneficial metabolite candidates in specific diseases was primarily a key step for further validation in model organisms. Herein, we proposed a reasonable hypothesis that the metabolites existing commonly in multiple beneficial (or negatively associated) bacteria might have a high probability of being effective drug candidates for specific diseases. According to this hypothesis, we screened metabolites associated with seven human diseases. For type I diabetes, 45 out of 88 screened metabolites had been reported as potential drugs in the literature. Meanwhile, 18 of these metabolites were specific to type I diabetes. Additionally, metabolite correlation could reflect disease relationships in some sense. Our results have demonstrated the potential of bioinformatics mining gut microbes' metabolites as drug candidates based on reported numerous microbe-disease associations and the Virtual Metabolic Human database. More subtle methods would be developed to ensure more accurate predictions.

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Wang, C. Y., Wen, Q. F., Wang, Q. Q., Kuang, X., Dong, C., Deng, Z. X., & Guo, F. B. (2022). Discovery of Drug Candidates for Specific Human Disease Based on Natural Products of Gut Microbes. Frontiers in Microbiology, 13. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.896740

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