| Literature DB >> 29082264 |
Muhammad U Sohail1,2, Asmaa Althani1,3, Haseeb Anwar2, Roberto Rizzi4, Hany E Marei1.
Abstract
The incidence of diabetes mellitus is rapidly increasing throughout the world. Although the exact cause of the disease is not fully clear, perhaps, genetics, ethnic origin, obesity, age, and lifestyle are considered as few of many contributory factors for the disease pathogenesis. In recent years, the disease progression is particularly linked with functional and taxonomic alterations in the gastrointestinal tract microbiome. A change in microbial diversity, referred as microbial dysbiosis, alters the gut fermentation profile and intestinal wall integrity and causes metabolic endotoxemia, low-grade inflammation, autoimmunity, and other affiliated metabolic disorders. This article aims to summarize the role of the gut microbiome in the pathogenesis of diabetes. Additionally, we summarize gut microbial dysbiosis in preclinical and clinical diabetes cases reported in literature in the recent years.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29082264 PMCID: PMC5634576 DOI: 10.1155/2017/9631435
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Diabetes Res Impact factor: 4.011
Figure 1Change in the microbiome fermentation profile changes gut permeability and energy homeostasis which causes endotoxemia, low-grade inflammation, and obesity. Poor energy homeostasis leads to hyperglycemia and hyperlipidemia which may lead to obesity and ultimately insulin resistance.
Figure 2A schematic diagram describing the role of the gastrointestinal tract microbiome in the development of the metabolic syndrome that leads to diabetes mellitus pathogenesis. Microbial dysbiosis impairs intestinal wall integrity and allows translocation of toxins from the gut lumen to the systemic circulation. This endotoxemia leads to low-grade inflammation, autoimmunity, and oxidative stress that may lead to beta cell destruction or insulin resistance.
Summary of the gut microbiome and metagenomic changes observed in different preclinical and clinical diabetes studies.
| Study format | Clinical features/major findings | Microbiome changes | Metagenome/metabolome changes | Reference |
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| Longitudinal infant T1DM | Out of 33 genetically predisposed T1DM infants, 12% developed T1DM, whereas 21% developed T1DM autoantibodies during the first 4 years of life | A decrease in alpha diversity and an overabundance of Blautia and Rikenellaceae | Modulation of sphingomyelin, lithocholic acid, lipids, branch-chained amino acid concentrations, and sugar transport pathways | [ |
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| Longitudinal infant T1DM | All four enrolled infants developed autoimmunity and T1DM within the first 3 years | Drop in alpha diversity and increase in Bacteroidetes ( | Not applicable | [ |
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| Metagenomics of the microbiome in T1DM patients | Microbial fermentation and functional components promoted autoimmune destruction of beta cells | Higher Bacteroides and lower | T1DM patients had higher carbohydrate metabolism, adhesions, motility, phages, prophages, sulfur metabolism, and stress responses | [ |
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| Metagenomics of the microbiome in T2DM patients microbiome | Not applicable | Microbial dysbiosis characterized by a decrease in butyrate-producing bacteria and an increase in the populations of various opportunistic pathogens | Higher gut oxidative stress and membrane transport of sugars | [ |
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| Metagenome in T2DM women | Elevated glucose, C peptide, leptin, triglycerides, and oxidative stress | Enriched with | Higher sugar metabolism and transport, fatty acid synthesis, and oxidative stress pathways | [ |
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| Adult T2DM | Ratio of Bacteroidetes to Firmicutes correlated positively and significantly with plasma glucose concentrations | Higher alpha diversity. Changes in beta diversity were characterized by higher Bacteroidetes in T2DM cases and Firmicutes belonging to class Clostridia in controls subjects | Not applicable | [ |
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| Metagenomics of T2DM patients before and after bariatric surgery | Surgery improved BMI, hypertension, lipid profile, and glycemic index | Bacteroidetes/Firmicutes ratio increased. Several changes in taxonomy composition | Changes in carbohydrate metabolism and the phosphotransferase system | [ |
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| Antibiotic treatment in high-fat diet-induceddiabetic mice | Antibiotic treatment reduced endotoxemia, glucose intolerance, body weight gain, inflammation, and oxidative stress | Antibiotic treatment changes microbiome architecture of high-fat diet-induced diabetic mice | Drop in endotoxemia, tissue inflammation, and oxidative stress markers | [ |
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| Fecal transplant from healthy mice to T1DM genetically susceptible mice | Prevents autoimmunity, and insulitis and delays T1DM development | Increase in Bacteroidetes and decrease in Firmicutes and | Increase in IgA, TGF | [ |
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| Antibiotic treatment of biobred diabetes-prone rat | Antibiotic treatment delayed/protected against TIDM | Antibiotic treatment lowered | Antibiotic treatment lowered insulitis | [ |