Gut Microbiome and Metabolic and Immune Indices in Males with or without Evidence of Metabolic Dysregulation.

IF 4.7 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Journal of Obesity & Metabolic Syndrome Pub Date : 2024-03-30 Epub Date: 2024-03-21 DOI:10.7570/jomes23022
Kyle M Hatton-Jones, Nicholas P West, Mike W C Thang, Pin-Yen Chen, Peter Davoren, Allan W Cripps, Amanda J Cox
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The contributions of the gut microbiota to obesity and metabolic disease represent a potentially modifiable factor that may explain variation in risk between individuals. This study aimed to explore relationships among microbial composition and imputed functional attributes, a range of soluble metabolic and immune indices, and gene expression markers in males with or without evidence of metabolic dysregulation (MetDys).

Methods: This case-control study included healthy males (n=15; 41.9±11.7 years; body mass index [BMI], 22.9±1.2 kg/m2) and males with evidence of MetDys (n=14; 46.6±10.0 years; BMI, 35.1±3.3 kg/m2) who provided blood and faecal samples for assessment of a range of metabolic and immune markers and microbial composition using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Metagenomic functions were imputed from microbial sequence data for analysis.

Results: In addition to elevated values in a range of traditional metabolic, adipokine and inflammatory indices in the MetDys group, 23 immunomodulatory genes were significantly altered in the MetDys group. Overall microbial diversity did not differ between groups; however, a trend for a higher relative abundance of the Bacteroidetes (P=0.06) and a lower relative abundance of the Verrucomicrobia (P=0.09) phyla was noted in the MetDys group. Using both family- and genera-level classifications, a partial least square discriminant analysis revealed unique microbial signatures between the groups.

Conclusion: These findings confirm the need for ongoing investigations in human clinical cohorts to further resolve the relationships between the gut microbiota and metabolic and immune markers and risk for metabolic disease.

有或无代谢失调证据的男性的肠道微生物组和代谢与免疫指标。
背景:肠道微生物群对肥胖和代谢性疾病的影响是一个潜在的可调节因素,它可以解释个体之间的风险差异。本研究旨在探讨有或无代谢失调(MetDys)证据的男性体内微生物组成和推测功能属性、一系列可溶性代谢和免疫指数以及基因表达标记物之间的关系:这项病例对照研究包括健康男性(n=15;41.9±11.7 岁;体重指数[BMI],22.9±1.2 kg/m2)和有代谢紊乱证据的男性(n=14;46.6±10.0 岁;体重指数[BMI],35.1±3.3 kg/m2),他们提供血液和粪便样本,利用 16S rRNA 基因测序评估一系列代谢和免疫指标及微生物组成。根据微生物序列数据对元基因组功能进行了估算分析:结果:在 MetDys 组中,除了一系列传统代谢、脂肪因子和炎症指数值升高外,23 个免疫调节基因也发生了显著变化。总体微生物多样性在各组之间并无差异;但是,MetDys 组中出现了类杆菌科相对丰度较高(P=0.06)和疣状单胞菌科相对丰度较低(P=0.09)的趋势。利用科和属一级的分类,偏最小二乘法判别分析揭示了两组之间独特的微生物特征:这些研究结果证实,有必要对人类临床队列进行持续调查,以进一步了解肠道微生物群与代谢和免疫指标以及代谢性疾病风险之间的关系。
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来源期刊
Journal of Obesity & Metabolic Syndrome
Journal of Obesity & Metabolic Syndrome ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM-
CiteScore
8.30
自引率
9.60%
发文量
39
审稿时长
19 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal was launched in 1992 and diverse studies on obesity have been published under the title of Journal of Korean Society for the Study of Obesity until 2004. Since 2017, volume 26, the title is now the Journal of Obesity & Metabolic Syndrome (pISSN 2508-6235, eISSN 2508-7576). The journal is published quarterly on March 30th, June 30th, September 30th and December 30th. The official title of the journal is now "Journal of Obesity & Metabolic Syndrome" and the abbreviated title is "J Obes Metab Syndr". Index words from medical subject headings (MeSH) list of Index Medicus are included in each article to facilitate article search. Some or all of the articles of this journal are included in the index of PubMed, PubMed Central, Scopus, Embase, DOAJ, Ebsco, KCI, KoreaMed, KoMCI, Science Central, Crossref Metadata Search, Google Scholar, and Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI).
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