| Literature DB >> 28970836 |
Jessica Lambertz1, Sabine Weiskirchen1, Silvano Landert2, Ralf Weiskirchen1.
Abstract
Fructose is one of the key dietary catalysts in the development of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). NAFLD comprises a complex disease spectrum, including steatosis (fatty liver), non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, hepatocyte injury, inflammation, and fibrosis. It is also the hepatic manifestation of the metabolic syndrome, which covers abdominal obesity, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, glucose intolerance, or type 2 diabetes mellitus. Commensal bacteria modulate the host immune system, protect against exogenous pathogens, and are gatekeepers in intestinal barrier function and maturation. Dysbalanced intestinal microbiota composition influences a variety of NAFLD-associated clinical conditions. Conversely, nutritional supplementation with probiotics and preobiotics impacting composition of gut microbiota can improve the outcome of NAFLD. In crosstalk with the host immune system, the gut microbiota is able to modulate inflammation, insulin resistance, and intestinal permeability. Moreover, the composition of microbiota of an individual is a kind of fingerprint highly influenced by diet. In addition, not only the microbiota itself but also its metabolites influence the metabolism and host immune system. The gut microbiota can produce vitamins and a variety of nutrients including short-chain fatty acids. Holding a healthy balance of the microbiota is therefore highly important. In the present review, we discuss the impact of long-term intake of fructose on the composition of the intestinal microbiota and its biological consequences in regard to liver homeostasis and disease. In particular, we will refer about fructose-induced alterations of the tight junction proteins affecting the gut permeability, leading to the translocation of bacteria and bacterial endotoxins into the blood circulation.Entities:
Keywords: SCFA; fructose; gut-liver-axis; insulin resistance; inulin; microbiota; prebiotics; probiotics
Year: 2017 PMID: 28970836 PMCID: PMC5609573 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Fructose in the crosstalk with microbiota in the pathogenesis of NAFLD.
| Species | Treatment | Findings | Conclusion | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse | Diet high in saturated fat, fructose, and cholesterol for 8 weeks | Diet-induced microbial dysbiosis contribute to the development of NASH. | Rahman et al. ( | |
| High fat diet with 10% fructose | Addition of | Sohn et al. ( | ||
| 30% fructose in drinking water | Endotoxin levels in portal blood and lipid peroxidation as well as TNF-α expression were significantly increased in fructose-fed mice. Hepatic lipid accumulation was lowered by concomitant treatment with antibiotics. | Fructose increase intestinal translocation of endotoxin leading to liver damage. | Bergheim et al. ( | |
| 30% fructose in drinking water for 8 weeks | In fructose-fed | Fructose-induced NAFLD is associated with intestinal bacterial overgrowth and increased intestinal permeability. | Spruss and Bergheim ( | |
| Chronic consumption of 30% fructose solution with or without | Treatment with | Treatment with | Wagnerberger et al. ( | |
| 30% fructose solution for 8 weeks | Occludin expression was lowered in the duodenum during fructose feeding without changes in microbiota. | Increased intestinal translocation of microbial components is involved in the onset of fructose-induced NAFLD. | Wagnerberger et al. ( | |
| high-fat diet plus 30% fructose solution (HFHF) | HFHF diet promoted changes in intestinal tight-junctions proteins, increased insulin resistance and plasma cholesterol. HFHF increased hepatic Lipocalin 2 ( | Diets high in fat and fructose increase the vulnerability to metabolic syndrome-related conditions associated with NAFLD. | de Sousa Rodrigues et al. ( | |
| 30% fructose solution for 8 weeks with or without | Treatment with | Ritze et al. ( | ||
| 30% fructose solution for 8 weeks and combination of bile acids chenodeoxycholic acid and cholic acid | The additional treatment with bile acids downregulated hepatic TNF-α, SREBP1, FAS mRNA expression, and lipid peroxidation. Bile acid treatment normalized expression of occludin, markers of Kupffer cell activation, and portal endotoxin levels. | Bile acids prevent fructose-induced hepatic steatosis through mechanisms that protect against the fructose-induced translocation of intestinal bacterial endotoxin | Volynets et al. ( | |
| 30% fructose solution for 8 weeks with or without concomitantly treatment with metformin (300 mg/kg body weight/day) in drinking water | Chronic consumption of fructose caused a significant increase in hepatic triglyceride and plasma AST levels. This effect was attenuated by metformin, which protected against loss of the tight-junction proteins occludin and zonula occludens-1 in the duodenum, thereby preventing increased translocation of bacterial endotoxin. | Metformin protects the liver from the onset of fructose-induced NAFLD through mechanisms involving its direct effects on hepatic insulin signaling and by altering intestinal permeability and subsequent endotoxin-dependent activation of Kupffer cells. | Spruss et al. ( | |
| Sugar- and fat-rich Western-style diet (WSD) for 12 weeks plus fructose-supplemented water (30%) | Fructose intake increased endotoxin translocation, induced a loss of mucus thickness in the colon (246%) and reduced defensin expression in the ileum and colon. Microbiota analysis revealed that fructose increased the | The consumption of a WSD or high fructose differentially affects gut permeability and microbiome. Fructose, especially when combined with a WSD, results in pronounced gut barrier dysfunction. | Volynets et al. ( | |
| 30% fructose solution, a high-fat diet, or a combination of both for 8 and 16 weeks | The combined diet induced development of hepatic steatosis and progression to steatohepatitis. Bacterial endotoxin levels in portal plasma increased, while levels of the tight junction protein occludin and zonula occludens-1 were reduced in the duodenum of all treated groups after 8 and 16 weeks. | Chronic intake of fructose and/or fat lead to the development of NAFLD over time which is associated with an increased translocation of bacterial endotoxin. | Sellmann et al. ( | |
| Normal diet and high fat diet (HFD) with or without fructose for 16 weeks | Livers of mice fed with HFD and fructose showed a higher infiltration of lymphocytes and a lower inflammatory profile of Kupffer cells than livers of mice fed with the HFD without fructose. In the resulting dysbiosis, fructose specifically prevented the decrease of mouse intestinal bacteria in HFD-fed mice and increased | Fructose induces dysbiosis which is modulated by the presence of dietary fat. Combined diet of fat and fructose prevents fat-induced activation of Kupffer cells. | Ferrere et al. ( | |
| High fat (40%)/high fructose (10%) diet with or without | Hepatic fat deposition, serum ALT level, and urinary 51Cr-EDTA clearance were significantly lower when mice received | Sohn et al. ( | ||
| Rat | Diet enriched in fat and fructose | The diet induced a marked (i) increase in | Diets enriched in fructose reduce bacterial colonization, lead to dysbiosis, increase numbers of mucin-degrading bacteria, and provoke inflammation in colon mucosa, thereby supporting NAFLD progression. | Jegatheesan et al. ( |
| Fructose-rich diet in combination with antibiotics for 8 weeks | After 4 weeks of treatment, fructose-fed rats exhibited higher values of fasting plasma insulin and homeostatic model assessment (HOMA) index. Antimicrobial therapy prevented diet-induced decrease of ileal occludin expression, increase of hepatic transaminases, lipid oxidation, and increase myeloperoxidase activity in ileum, liver, and visceral white adipose tissue. Similarly, quantities of portal TNF-α and LPS, as well as ileal TNF-α were induced by fructose. Fructose increased levels of plasma and hepatic triglycerides, irrespectively of antimicrobial treatment. Fructose increased oxidative damage to mitochondrial lipids and proteins, together with a significant decrease in antioxidant activity, while antibiotic treatment reversed all of these effects. A diet-dependent increase in | Fructose promotes alterations in the gut microbiota profile triggering inflammation and metabolic dysregulation in the gut, liver, and visceral white adipose tissue. These obesity-related features can be experimentally reversed by treatment with antibiotics. | Crescenzo et al. ( | |
| Diet enriched in copper combined with drinking water containing 30% fructose | The abundance of 38 fecal metabolites changed after dietary doses of copper or high fructose. Four SCFAs (valeric acid, butyric acid, isovaleric acid, and isobutyric acid) showed major abundance changes. The bacterial-derived long-chain fatty acid margaric was increased by excessive fructose intake. | Dietary fructose modifies the gut microbiota phylum profile contributing to the metabolic phenotype in NAFLD. | Wei et al. ( | |
| 60% isonitrogenous fructose diet for 4 weeks | Isonitrogenous fructose diet decreased | Fructose provokes dysbiosis and fructose-induced hepatic alterations associated with NAFLD can be blunted by nitrogen supply. | Jegatheesan et al. ( | |
| HFD for 5 weeks with or without a synbiotic composed out of | HFD for 5 weeks caused hepatic steatosis, insulin resistance, endotoxemia, increased production of SCFA, and increased numbers of | The synbiotic composed of | Rivero-Gutiérrez et al. ( | |
| 70% (w/w) high-fructose diet for 3 weeks with or without oral addition of | Fructose increased plasma glucose, insulin, triglycerides, total cholesterol, oxidative stress, liver mass, and liver lipids. Probiotic treatment lowered plasma glucose, insulin, triglycerides, and oxidative stress levels, while liver mass and cholesterol were only reduced at high-doses of probiotics. Probiotic treatment reduced lipogenesis | The combined administration of probiotic | Park et al. ( | |
| Fructose-rich diet for 8 weeks combined with oral treatment with either antibiotics or fecal samples from control rats | The fructose-rich diet induced markers of metabolic syndrome, inflammation, oxidative stress and numbers of | The development of fructose-induced metabolic syndrome is correlated with variations in the gut content of specific bacterial taxa. | Di Luccia et al. ( | |
| 10% fructose in drinking water for 6 weeks plus orally administered Juglanin | Juglanin prevented fructose-induced systemic increase of LPS levels, ALT, AST, ALP, and upregulation of TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, and IL-18. The flavonol suppressed fructose-feeding-induced activation of signaling pathways related to hepatic injury and inflammation. | Juglanin represses inflammatory responses and apoptosis through TLR4-regulated MAPK/NF-κB and JAK2/STAT3 signaling pathways. | Zhou et al. ( | |
| Monkey | Chronic | Fructose increased biomarkers of liver damage, endotoxemia, and microbial translocation index. | Fructose rapidly causes liver damage secondary to changes in endotoxemia levels and microbial translocation. | Kavanagh et al. ( |
| Human | Fructose feeding study | After 24-h fructose feeding, endotoxin levels in NAFLD adolescents increased after fructose beverages (consumed with meals) as compared to healthy children. Similarly, endotoxin was significantly increased after adolescents consumed fructose beverages for 2 weeks. | Fructose induces low level endotoxemia contributing to pediatric NAFLD. | Jin et al. ( |
Figure 1Impact of fructose on microbiome. Under healthy conditions, the intestine is organized into large numbers of self-renewing crypt-villus units guaranteeing effective secretory and absorptive functions. Elevated concentrations of fructose favor pro-inflammatory microbiota producing endotoxins and suppressing production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) that are essential for intestinal barrier function. Pro-inflammatory microbiota and their products [i.e., lipopolysaccharide (LPS); pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs)] recruit macrophages and bind to toll-like receptors (e.g., TLR4) leading to the release of cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) causing mucosal inflammation. Subsequently, inflammation decreases expression of tight junction proteins resulting in a higher permeability of the gut barrier. In addition, endotoxins enter the leaky barrier leading to epithelial disruption and increase penetration of pathogens into the blood stream. Reaching the liver, endotoxins increase inflammation by activation Kupffer cells through binding to TLR4 and formation of reactive oxygen (ROS). The formed radicals induce hepatic damage and fibrosis. Furthermore, in the liver the fructokinase generate fructose-1-phosphate from fructose that is degraded into products providing substrate for de novo lipogenesis promoting steatosis.
Figure 2Bacterial phyla colonizing the healthy or diseased gut. (A) Bifidobacterium longum is a gram-positive, rod-shaped, health-promoting lactic acid bacterium present in the human gastrointestinal tract contributing to the production of butyrate. (B) Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron is a gram-negative, anaerobic microbe which dominates the intestinal tract flora of most mammals and provides the host with metabolic capabilities. (C) Enterobacter cloacae is a gram-negative, facultative-anaerobic, rod-shaped bacterium of the normal gut flora helping to debranch organic substances for energy production. (D) Citrobacter freundii is a common component of the gut microbiome of healthy humans. It is a facultative anerobic, rod-shaped gram-negative bacteria. (E) Escherichia coli is a gram-negative, facultative anaerobic, rod-shaped, “coliform” bacterium, which is commonly found in the lower intestine of warm-blooded organisms. Although most E. coli strains are harmless and part of the normal gut flora, some serotypes are occasionally responsible for food contamination causing serious intoxication in their hosts. They have capacity to produce vitamin K2 and prevent colonization of the intestine with pathogenic bacteria. (F) Enterococcus faecalis is a gram-positive, commensal bacterium inhabiting the gastrointestinal tracts. They are often arranged in pairs or in chain form and have both an anaerobic and aerobic metabolism. (G) Salmonella enterica is a gram-negative bacterium, flagellated, facultative anaerobic with a rod-shaped phenotype. A number of Salmonella variations are serious human pathogens provoking (spontaneous healing) diarrhea. (H) Clostridium difficile is a gram-positive, anaerobic, spore-forming bacterium able to produce multiple toxins causing diarrhea and inflammation. It may become opportunistically established in the human colon during antibiotic therapy. (A–H) All images were taken from cultures deposited in the national Culture Collection of Switzerland AG (CCOS, Wädenswil, Switzerland, https://www.ccos.ch/). The respective CCOS strain numbers are: CCOS 606, CCOS 632, CCOS 668, CCOS 669, CCOS 684, CCOS 688, CCOS 739, and CCOS 958. All images were taken using a phase contrast microscope at 1,000×. Space bars, 10 µm.
Figure 3Hepatic fructose metabolism and uric acid. The metabolism of fructose in the liver starts with a phosphorylation to fructose-1-phosphate. This happens quickly and causes an accumulation of AMP, which stimulates the AMP deaminase and the xanthine oxidase. This results in elevated production of uric acid in liver and serum. Uric acid triggers adipose tissue formation, glucose intolerance, elevated blood pressure, and dyslipidemia. Uric acid also promotes mitochondrial oxidative stress and release of superoxide anion and hydrogen peroxidase (H2O2). This gives rise to reduced aconitase activity resulting in citrate accumulation. This results in increased cytosolic acetyl-CoA which is a substrate for de novo lipogenesis. In addition, uric acid can induce endoplasmatic reticulum stress in hepatocytes, thereby leading to a direct activation of genes such as SREBP-1c stimulating hepatic steatosis.
Figure 4Intervention strategies for the treatment of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). NAFLD is a multifactorial disease manifesting in liver steatosis, hepatocyte injury, inflammation, and fibrogenesis. It is further associated with abdominal obesity, insulin resistance, diabetes, and dyslipidemia. Recent evidence suggests that the gut microbiome represent a significant environmental factor contributing to NAFLD. Dysbiosis induces deregulation of the gut endothelial barrier function facilitating bacterial translocation. Bacterial-derived products [e.g., lipopolysaccharide (LPS)] are key driver of hepatic inflammation. Although effective pharmacological therapies for NAFLD are not available, lifestyle changes (modulation of diet), exercise, and weight loss have been shown to be beneficial on NAFLD outcome. Supplementation with probiotics and prebiotics restoring the microbial balance and changing the “bad microbiota” to “good microbiota” have health-promoting effects by generation of short-chain fatty acids (e.g., acetate, propionate, and butyrate) interfering with NAFLD progression.
Figure 5Structure, regulation and functional aspects of adenosine monophosphate kinase (AMPK) biology. (A,B) The AMPK is a heterotrimeric protein kinase complex comprised of α-, β-, and γ-subunits. AMPK is activated by phosphorylation of a critical threonine residue located within the α-subunit that is triggered by binding of AMP and/or ADP to the γ-subunit. ATP competitively inhibits the binding of both AMP and ADP to the γ-subunit suggesting that AMPK is a critical sensor of AMP/ATP or ADP/ATP ratios (93). The space bar represents 10 Å. The CPK representation in (A) was generated with the interactive web-based tool NGL (94) and the ribbon drawing in (B) with Ribbons XP Version 3.0 (95) using the structure coordinates 5UFU deposited in the PDB Brookhaven database. More structural details of human AMPK are given elsewhere (96, 97).
Figure 6Adenosine monophosphate kinase (AMPK) activity and gut microbiota. In subjects with a balanced “good” microbiota (left), AMPK phosphorylates key regulatory factors [e.g., acetyl-CoA carboxylase 1 (ACC1); sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1c (SREB1c)] that inhibit synthesis of fatty acids, cholesterol, and triglycerides. It further stimulates β-oxidation and glucose uptake in skeletal muscle and inhibits gluconeogenesis in the liver. During dysbiosis (right), “bad” gut microbiota inhibits phosphorylation of AMPK thereby negatively influencing hepatic fatty oxidation and favoring lipogenesis resulting in excessive fat storage in the liver and obesity.
Figure 7Chemical structure of inulin and fructooligosaccharides. (A) Inulins are naturally occurring indigestible polysaccharides belonging to the class of dietary fibers. Inulin from the blue Agave (Agave tequilana) is composed of linear and branched fructose chains that are connected via β-2,1 and β-2,6 linkages to each other with a total degree of polymerization between 25 and 34. The depicted structure was constituted with Jmol (version 14.2.15_2015.07.09) using the PubChem CID file 24763 deposited in the PubChem Compound Database. (B) Fructoligosaccharides contain a variable number of β-D-fructofuranosyl units with one glucosyl unit. (C) Representative fructooligosaccharides (FOS) are kestose (GF2), nystose (GF3), fructosylnystose (GF4) differing in number of fructose residues. The general molecular formula of a FOS is C6(+1)H10(+1)+2O5(+1)+1 giving rise to a molecular mass of (n + 1) × 180.156 − n × 18.015 g/mol when n is the total number fructose residues.