一次与人类相关的快餐迅速重组代谢组和转录组特征,其方式取决于肠道微生物群。

Immunometabolism Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-09-18 DOI:10.20900/immunometab20210029
Lucas J Osborn, Danny Orabi, Maryam Goudzari, Naseer Sangwan, Rakhee Banerjee, Amanda L Brown, Anagha Kadam, Anthony D Gromovsky, Pranavi Linga, Gail A M Cresci, Tytus D Mak, Belinda B Willard, Jan Claesen, J Mark Brown
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:导致心血管代谢疾病的一个主要因素是热量过剩,这往往是食用低成本、高热量快餐的结果。研究表明,肠道微生物以依赖饮食的方式对心血管疾病起着关键作用。鉴于饮食和肠道微生物群对心血管代谢疾病的重要作用,我们假设,食用快餐后产生的微生物代谢物可引起肝脏的急性代谢反应:方法:我们给常规饲养的小鼠或用抗生素耗尽微生物群的小鼠口服一次液化快餐或液化对照啮齿动物饲料。四小时后,小鼠被处死,我们使用门静脉和外周血非靶向代谢组学、16S rRNA 基因测序、肝脏靶向代谢组学和宿主肝脏 RNA 测序来鉴定新型快餐衍生微生物代谢物及其对肝功能的急性影响:结果:喂食快餐后,门静脉血液中富集了几种候选微生物代谢物,而抗生素处理过的小鼠体内则基本没有这些代谢物。令人震惊的是,在灌胃后四小时,食用快餐导致肠道微生物群落迅速重组,并极大地改变了肝脏基因表达。重要的是,饮食驱动的微生物组和肝脏转录组的重塑依赖于完整的微生物群落,而在抗生素消减的动物身上观察不到:总之,这些数据表明,一顿快餐足以重塑小鼠的肠道微生物群落,并产生独特的食物源微生物代谢物特征。未来的研究将确定特定代谢物对心脏代谢疾病进展的贡献以及这些动物研究的转化意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

A Single Human-Relevant Fast Food Meal Rapidly Reorganizes Metabolomic and Transcriptomic Signatures in a Gut Microbiota-Dependent Manner.

A Single Human-Relevant Fast Food Meal Rapidly Reorganizes Metabolomic and Transcriptomic Signatures in a Gut Microbiota-Dependent Manner.

A Single Human-Relevant Fast Food Meal Rapidly Reorganizes Metabolomic and Transcriptomic Signatures in a Gut Microbiota-Dependent Manner.

A Single Human-Relevant Fast Food Meal Rapidly Reorganizes Metabolomic and Transcriptomic Signatures in a Gut Microbiota-Dependent Manner.

Background: A major contributor to cardiometabolic disease is caloric excess, often a result of consuming low cost, high calorie fast food. Studies have demonstrated the pivotal role of gut microbes contributing to cardiovascular disease in a diet-dependent manner. Given the central contributions of diet and gut microbiota to cardiometabolic disease, we hypothesized that microbial metabolites originating after fast food consumption can elicit acute metabolic responses in the liver.

Methods: We gave conventionally raised mice or mice that had their microbiomes depleted with antibiotics a single oral gavage of a liquified fast food meal or liquified control rodent chow meal. After four hours, mice were sacrificed and we used untargeted metabolomics of portal and peripheral blood, 16S rRNA gene sequencing, targeted liver metabolomics, and host liver RNA sequencing to identify novel fast food-derived microbial metabolites and their acute effects on liver function.

Results: Several candidate microbial metabolites were enriched in portal blood upon fast food feeding, and were essentially absent in antibiotic-treated mice. Strikingly, at four hours post-gavage, fast food consumption resulted in rapid reorganization of the gut microbial community and drastically altered hepatic gene expression. Importantly, diet-driven reshaping of the microbiome and liver transcriptome was dependent on an intact microbial community and not observed in antibiotic ablated animals.

Conclusions: Collectively, these data suggest a single fast food meal is sufficient to reshape the gut microbial community in mice, yielding a unique signature of food-derived microbial metabolites. Future studies are in progress to determine the contribution of select metabolites to cardiometabolic disease progression and the translational relevance of these animal studies.

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