| Literature DB >> 30101405 |
Francois Brial1, Aurélie Le Lay1, Marc-Emmanuel Dumas2,3, Dominique Gauguier4,5,6.
Abstract
Evidence from the literature keeps highlighting the impact of mutualistic bacterial communities of the gut microbiota on human health. The gut microbita is a complex ecosystem of symbiotic bacteria which contributes to mammalian host biology by processing, otherwise, indigestible nutrients, supplying essential metabolites, and contributing to modulate its immune system. Advances in sequencing technologies have enabled structural analysis of the human gut microbiota and allowed detection of changes in gut bacterial composition in several common diseases, including cardiometabolic disorders. Biological signals sent by the gut microbiota to the host, including microbial metabolites and pro-inflammatory molecules, mediate microbiome-host genome cross-talk. This rapidly expanding line of research can identify disease-causing and disease-predictive microbial metabolite biomarkers, which can be translated into novel biodiagnostic tests, dietary supplements, and nutritional interventions for personalized therapeutic developments in common diseases. Here, we review results from the most significant studies dealing with the association of products from the gut microbial metabolism with cardiometabolic disorders. We underline the importance of these postbiotic biomarkers in the diagnosis and treatment of human disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Animal models; Complex diseases; Gut microbiome; Metabolic modeling; Metabolic networks; Metabolomics; Microbiota; Symbiotic bacterial systems; Transgenomic interactions
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30101405 PMCID: PMC6182343 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-018-2901-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
Fig. 1Examples of essential metabolites synthesised by gut bacteria. Metabolites produced by the gut microbiota from dietary substrates are transported to the liver where they can undergo enzymatic modification (e.g., TMA to TMAO), prior to transfer to the circulation and to other organs. SCFAs (predominantly butyrate) can be used locally as an energy source by gut mucosal cells. BCAAs branched-chain amino acids, SCFAs short-chain fatty acids
Fig. 2Representation of the methylamine pathway illustrating the microbiota–host co-metabolism. Bacterial enzymes use dietary substrates, choline, betaine, l-carnitine, γ-butyrobetaine, trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) to synthesise trimethylamine (TMA), which is transferred across the intestinal endothelium to the circulation and transported to the liver where it is metabolised into TMAO by the enzyme flavin-containing monooxygenase (FMO3). The TMA substrate betaine can be synthesised from choline and l-carnitine. 1: Choline TMA lyase; 2: betaine reductase; 3: carnitine reductase; 4: carnitine TMA lyase; 5: TMAO reductase; 6: choline dehydrogenase; 7: betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase; 8: l-carnitine dehydrogenase; 9: γ-butyrobetaine dioxygenase; 10: γ-butyrobetainyl-CoA: carnitine CoA transferase
Fig. 3Methylamine-mediated discrimination of adaptation to dietary challenge in isogenic mice. Orthogonal partial least-squares discriminant analysis (O-PLS-DA) scores plots built on 1H NMR metabolomics of 24-h urinary collections was used to discriminate isogenic C57BL/6J mice fed carbohydrate diet (blue) or obesogenic high-fat diet (red) (a). Assigned O-PLS-DA model coefficient plot underlines the power of TMA, TMAO and choline to discriminate diet groups (b).
Adapted from Dumas et al. [60]