粪便宏蛋白质组学分析显示健康个体和心力衰竭患者的心血管风险较高。

IF 12.2 1区 医学 Q1 GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY
Gut Microbes Pub Date : 2025-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-12-22 DOI:10.1080/19490976.2024.2441356
Chaoran Yang, Leticia Camargo Tavares, Han-Chung Lee, Joel R Steele, Rosilene V Ribeiro, Anna L Beale, Stephanie Yiallourou, Melinda J Carrington, David M Kaye, Geoffrey A Head, Ralf B Schittenhelm, Francine Z Marques
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引用次数: 0

摘要

肠道微生物群是饮食和心血管疾病(CVD)之间的关键联系。利用粪便宏蛋白质组学(一种同时捕获人类肠道和微生物组蛋白的方法),我们确定了肠道微生物组、饮食、肠道健康和心血管疾病之间的串扰。解释了传统的心血管疾病风险因素(年龄、体重指数、性别、血压)
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Faecal metaproteomics analysis reveals a high cardiovascular risk profile across healthy individuals and heart failure patients.

The gut microbiota is a crucial link between diet and cardiovascular disease (CVD). Using fecal metaproteomics, a method that concurrently captures human gut and microbiome proteins, we determined the crosstalk between gut microbiome, diet, gut health, and CVD. Traditional CVD risk factors (age, BMI, sex, blood pressure) explained < 10% of the proteome variance. However, unsupervised human protein-based clustering analysis revealed two distinct CVD risk clusters (low-risk and high-risk) with different blood pressure (by 9 mmHg) and sex-dependent dietary potassium and fiber intake. In the human proteome, the low-risk group had lower angiotensin-converting enzymes, inflammatory proteins associated with neutrophil extracellular trap formation and auto-immune diseases. In the microbial proteome, the low-risk group had higher expression of phosphate acetyltransferase that produces SCFAs, particularly in fiber-fermenting bacteria. This model identified severity across phenotypes in heart failure patients and long-term risk of cardiovascular events in a large population-based cohort. These findings underscore multifactorial gut-to-host mechanisms that may underlie risk factors for CVD.

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来源期刊
Gut Microbes
Gut Microbes Medicine-Microbiology (medical)
CiteScore
18.20
自引率
3.30%
发文量
196
审稿时长
10 weeks
期刊介绍: The intestinal microbiota plays a crucial role in human physiology, influencing various aspects of health and disease such as nutrition, obesity, brain function, allergic responses, immunity, inflammatory bowel disease, irritable bowel syndrome, cancer development, cardiac disease, liver disease, and more. Gut Microbes serves as a platform for showcasing and discussing state-of-the-art research related to the microorganisms present in the intestine. The journal emphasizes mechanistic and cause-and-effect studies. Additionally, it has a counterpart, Gut Microbes Reports, which places a greater focus on emerging topics and comparative and incremental studies.
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