Authors
Zuo, N., Cai, X., Wang, W., Ren, Z., Jiang, Z., Jiang, W., Song, X., Gu, Y.
Abstract
Nicotine accumulates in the gut and drives non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) via the gut-liver axis, yet no effective clinical intervention is currently available. To address this challenge, the probiotic Escherichia coli Nissle 1917 (EcN) was engineered for in situ nicotine clearance in the gut. Mutational screening of nicotine oxidoreductase 2 (PpNicA2) identified a highly active variant, PpNicA2A107R. Its incorporation into EcN together with an electron transfer protein (CycN) and a newly identified transporter (T3/T7) yielded 80% nicotine-degrading activity. Chromosomal integration of this module generated a stable strain, EcN-N12, which in NASH mouse models depleted intestinal nicotine, rescued hepatic lipid metabolism, alleviated tissue damage, and intercepted the nicotine-mediated gut-liver axis pathological progression. This work thus offers an effective and clinically translatable approach for nicotine-associated diseases.
Preprint server:
bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 10 Jul 2026.
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