Folic acid preventsC. elegansfolate deficiency indirectly via bacterial uptake of a breakdown product: a route that can also increase bacterial toxicity and ageing

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Abstract

Supplementation with the synthetic oxidised folate, folic acid is used to prevent neural tube defects and other symptoms of folate deficiency. However, several unanswered questions remain over folic acid efficacy, safety and interactions with gut microbes. Prevention of a development defect caused by folate deficiency in the nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans requires > 10 fold higher concentrations of folic acid compared to folinic acid, a reduced folate. Here we show that the major route for folic acid to restore normal development is indirect via the Escherichia coli used to feed C. elegans. This route occurs mainly via the E. coli transporter AbgT, which takes up the folic acid breakdown product para-aminobenzoate-glutamate (PABA-glu). We found that folic acid preparations, including a commercial supplement, contain 0.3- 4.0 % of this breakdown product. Previously, we have shown that inhibiting bacterial folate synthesis increases C. elegans lifespan by removing a life-shortening bacterial activity. Here, we show that folic acid restores bacterial folate synthesis and reverses this lifespan increase. It is still to be determined whether this bacterial route increases host folate levels in humans and if there are situations where increased bacterial folate synthesis has negative health complications.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00
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License: CC-BY-4.0