| Literature DB >> 29725936 |
Lijuan Sun1,2, Lanjing Ma1, Yubo Ma3, Faming Zhang4, Changhai Zhao2, Yongzhan Nie5.
Abstract
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Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29725936 PMCID: PMC5960470 DOI: 10.1007/s13238-018-0546-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Protein Cell ISSN: 1674-800X Impact factor: 14.870
Figure 1Impact of gut microbiota on local and distant organs contributes to obesity development and progression. In local tissues, obesity-associated gut microbiota have an increased capacity to harvest energy from the diet, stimulate gene reprogramming in the colon, change polypeptide hormones and other bioactive molecules released by EC cells, decrease the intestinal barrier, and disturb immune homeostasis. Gut microbiota also communicate with host adipose tissue and the liver and brain. Microbiota-fat-signaling axis. Gut microbiota participates in the regulation of adipogenesis through distinct mechanisms. LPS triggers an immune response along with inflammation and immune-cell infiltration. SCFAs also participate in insulin-mediated fat accumulation in adipocytes via activation their receptors GPR43 and GPR41, which inhibits lipolysis and encourages adipocyte differentiation. Gut-liver axis. The presence of a dysbiotic microbiome causes subsequent increases in gut permeability to bacteria-derived pathogens, including LPS and ethanol. In the liver, LPS causes inflammation by stimulating immune cells. Certain metabolites, such as bile acids, SCFAs, and TMAO, also play a role in NAFLD pathophysiology. Microbiota-brain-gut axis. Gut afferent neuron and gut hormones are key signaling molecules involved in gut-brain communication and host metabolism. Bioactive molecules involved in this process include LPS, gut peptides, SCFAs and lactate