| Literature DB >> 31803054 |
Shengjie Yang1, Xinye Li1,2, Fan Yang1, Ran Zhao1,2, Xiandu Pan1,2, Jiaqi Liang3, Li Tian1, Xiaoya Li2,4, Longtao Liu4, Yanwei Xing1, Min Wu1.
Abstract
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death worldwide, especially in developed countries, and atherosclerosis (AS) is the common pathological basis of many cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) such as coronary heart disease (CHD). The role of the gut microbiota in AS has begun to be appreciated in recent years. Trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), an important gut microbe-dependent metabolite, is generated from dietary choline, betaine, and L-carnitine. Multiple studies have suggested a correlation between plasma TMAO levels and the risk of AS. However, the mechanism underlying this relationship is still unclear. In this review, we discuss the TMAO-involved mechanisms of atherosclerotic CVD from the perspective of inflammation, inflammation-related immunity, cholesterol metabolism, and atherothrombosis. We also summarize available clinical studies on the role of TMAO in predicting prognostic outcomes, including major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), in patients presenting with AS. Finally, since TMAO may be a novel therapeutic target for AS, several therapeutic strategies including drugs, dietary, etc. to lower TMAO levels that are currently being explored are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: atherosclerosis; cardiovascular disease; clinical prognostic stratification; inflammation mechanism; therapy; trimethylamine N-oxide
Year: 2019 PMID: 31803054 PMCID: PMC6877687 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2019.01360
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1TMAO-involved mechanisms promoting AS. (A) TMAO and inflammation-immunity. In this mechanism, elevated TMAO activates the expression of SR-A1 and CD36 in macrophages, thus stimulating the uptake of ox-LDL and foam cell formation; the TMAO-induced increase in HSP expression is also involved in this process. TMAO levels are positively associated with monocyte activation and inflammation. Elevated TMAO levels also induce NLRP3 inflammasome activation and subsequently trigger inflammatory and immune responses. (B) TMAO and inflammation. Elevated TMAO levels lead to inflammation, accompanied with increased expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines and decreased expression of anti-inflammatory cytokines. (C, D) TMAO also inhibits bile acid synthesis and RCT, contributes to platelet hyperreactivity, and enhances the potential for thrombosis; all of which promote the occurrence of AS. AS, atherosclerosis; HSP, heat shock protein; RCT, reverse cholesterol transport; FXR, farnesoid X receptor; SHP, small heterodimer partner; Npc1L1, Niemann-Pick C1-like1; CRP, C-reactive protein; FMO3-KO, FMO-3 knockout; TF, tissue factor; VCAM-1, vascular cell adhesion molecule-1; JNK, c-JUN NH2-terminal protein kinase; ERK, extracellular signal-regulated kinase.
Human studies of TMAO as a potential novel and independent risk factor for predicting clinical risk of atherosclerosis (AS) and prognostic stratification.
| Study | Patient population | Main findings/outcomes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Positive results |
| Subjects undergoing selective cardiac evaluations (N = 1,876) | Elevated levels of fasting choline, TMAO and betaine were dose-dependent associated with the risk of CVD |
| ( | 302 with CHD and 59 with NCA in southern China | Plasma concentrations of TMAO, creatinine, choline, and carnitine were notably higher in CHD patients than in those with NCA | |
| ( | 132 controls, 243 with CHD, and 175 with CHD and T2DMv | Plasma TMAO levels were remarkably higher in CHD patients than in controls and were significantly elevated in CHD patients with T2DM; TMAO was an independent predictor in CHD patients with or without T2DM | |
| ( | 275 with CHD and 275 controls | Urinary TMAO, but not its precursors, was correlated with a risk of CHD and may accelerate the development of CHD | |
| ( | 335 with STEMI and 53 healthy controls | TMAO levels were higher in STEMI; elevated plasma TMAO levels predicted both a high SYNTAX score and the presence of multivessel disease and were associated with higher coronary atherosclerotic load | |
| ( | 520 HIV-infected and 217 uninfected (112 incident plaque cases) | In HIV-infected individuals, higher TMAO levels were correlated with an enhanced risk of carotid plaques | |
| ( | 220 subjects in the Tübingen lifestyle intervention program | Newly demonstrated that elevated serum TMAO levels had positive correlation with increased cIMT | |
|
| 4007 patients undergoing elective coronary angiography | Elevated plasma TMAO levels were associated with an increased risk of incident MACE. | |
| ( | 530 with chest pain (suspected ACS) and 1683 with ACS | Elevated TMAO/TML levels were correlated with MACE over both 30 days and 6 months of follow-up and were also relevant to incident long-term (1-year and 7-year) all-cause mortality | |
|
| 720 patients with stable heart failure | Elevated plasma TMAO levels were associated with a 3.4-fold enhanced mortality risk and predicted 5-year mortality risk. | |
| ( | 2235 with stable CAD; 935 with PAD | Higher plasma TMAO levels were respectively associated with a 4-fold and 2.7-fold enhanced mortality risk in a 5-year follow-up period and could predict 5-year all-cause mortality risk. | |
| ( | 1079 with acute MI | TMAO independently predicted death/MI at 2 years, but was not able to predict death/MI at 6 months, and was superior to currently used biomarkers | |
| ( | 78 and 593 with recent prior ischemic stroke | Both cohorts showed that higher plasma TMAO levels were related to an increased risk of subsequent CV events | |
| Negative results |
| 322 patients with atherosclerotic ischemic stroke and TIA and 231 asymptomatic AS controls | Stroke and TIA patients had significantly lower TMAO levels than asymptomatic group, rather than higher. And there was no significant change in blood TMAO levels in asymptomatic atherosclerotic controls. |
|
| 817 participants | TMAO was not associated with cIMT, a measure of AS, during10-year follow-up. | |
| ( | 264 with carotid artery AS and 62 healthy controls | No remarkable association between TMAO and CV mortality was found | |
|
| 235 patients receiving hemodialysis | No obvious association between serum TMAO levels and hospitalizations or CV death and all-cause mortality. | |
|
| 339 patients of suspected CAD. | Plasma TMAO or betaine levels were not associated with the presence of CHD or MI history or incident CV events during 8-year follow-up. |
CHD, coronary heart disease; NCA, normal coronary arteries; T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus; STEMI, ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction; MI, myocardial infarction; cIMT, carotid intima-media thickness; MACE, major adverse cardiovascular events; ACS, acute coronary syndromes; CAD, coronary artery disease; PAD, peripheral artery disease; TIA, transient ischemic attack.
Figure 2TMAO potential as a therapeutic target in AS. Dietary choline, L-carnitine, betaine, and other choline-containing compounds are the major nutrient precursors of TMAO, and they are metabolized to TMA by the gut microbiota and various enzymes. Then, TMA can be absorbed in the intestines and delivered to the liver through the portal circulation, where it is converted to TMAO by FMO3. TMAO can be targeted as follows: via the diet, dietary supplements and lifestyle interventions can significantly affect TMAO levels; antibiotics, probiotics, probiotic functional products, and some natural molecules can markedly decrease TMA and TMAO levels by remodeling the gut microbiota; PSE, meldonium, DMB, and CutC/D inhibitors can suppress the generation of TMA; and trigonelline and guggulsterone can inhibit the conversion of TMA to TMAO by inhibiting FMO3. MD, Mediterranean diet; DMB, 3,3-dimethyl-1-butanol; PSE, plant sterol ester.