人体微生物群与糖尿病的关系以及影响肠道微生物群特征的有效策略

Majid Eslami, Fateme Sadat Tabatabaee, Maryam Hemmati, Ferdos Abbasi, Ali Babaeizad, Bahman Yousefi
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摘要

:人体提供了一个存在数万亿微生物的环境,这些微生物被称为 "微生物组"。这些生物的多样性、组成和功能取决于它们的身体部位。肠道微生物群是胃肠道(GI)中密集的微生物群落,据认为其所含的基因比人类基因组多 100 倍。因此,肠道微生物群与人体之间应该存在着重要的双向关系。正常的肠道微生物群发挥着多种功能,使我们的身体处于平衡状态,包括免疫系统训练、营养物质的良好消化、调节肠道屏障,以及产生神经递质、激素和维生素等必需分子。糖尿病是一个日益严重的危机,全世界不同年龄段的许多人都患上了糖尿病,这些肠道居民的菌群失调对糖尿病的影响很大。益生菌、益生菌和合成益生菌是导致肠道微生物群谱发生变化的一些决定性因素,因此,人们一直在考虑一种新的策略,既能平衡这些微生物,又能预防代谢性疾病,糖尿病就是其中之一。通过对糖尿病病理生理学的研究,人们对治疗糖尿病的旧方法,如阿卡波糖、瑞格列奈、胰岛素泵疗法(IPT)和每日多次注射疗法(MDI)进行了研究和优化,以患者为本,从而获得了更好且有效的治疗方法。本综述阐明了影响肠道微生物群概况的关键因素、糖尿病的病因、人体微生物群与糖尿病之间的联系、新旧策略的不同适应症,以及糖尿病患者与非糖尿病患者相比发生变化的几种临床研究类型。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Relationship Between Human Microbiota and Diabetes and Effective Strategies Influencing the Features of Gut Microbiota
: The human body provides an environment in which trillions of microorganisms called “microbiome” exist. The diversity, composition, and function of these organisms depend on their body sites. The gut microbiota, a dense microbial community in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, is thought to contain 100 times more genes than the human genome. Therefore, there should be a significant bidirectional relationship between gut microbiota and the human body. Normal gut microbiota performs several functions, keeping our body in a balanced situation, including immune system training, well-digesting nutrients, modulating the gut barrier, and producing essential molecules, such as neurotransmitters, hormones, and vitamins. Diabetes mellitus, a growing crisis, has involved many individuals in different age groups all around the world and has been significantly affected by these GI inhabitants' dysbiosis. Since some determining factors causing changes in the profile of gut microbiota are prebiotics, probiotics, and synbiotics, there have been considered a novel strategy for balancing these microorganisms and yet preventing metabolic diseases, one of which is diabetes. Scrutinizing the pathophysiology of diabetes mellitus, old methods of treating diabetes, such as acarbose, repaglinide, insulin pump therapy (IPT), and multiple daily injections (MDI) therapy, have been studied and optimized to be patient-based, resulting in a better yet effective treatment. In this review, key elements affecting the profile of gut microbiota, the etiology of diabetes, and the connection between human microbiota and diabetes, different indications of old and new strategies, and a few clinical types of research on changes occurring in diabetic patients in comparison to non-diabetic individuals have been elucidated.
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