| Literature DB >> 32153527 |
Yu Xu1, Ning Wang1, Hor-Yue Tan1, Sha Li1, Cheng Zhang1, Yibin Feng1.
Abstract
Obesity and its metabolic syndrome, including liver disorders and type 2 diabetes, are a worldwide epidemic and are intimately linked to diet. The gut microbiota interaction has been pointed to as a hot topic of research in the treatment of obesity and related metabolic diseases by influencing energy metabolism and the immune system. In terms of the novel beneficial microbes identified, Akkermansia muciniphila (A. muciniphila) colonizes the mucosa layer of the gut and modulates basal metabolism. A. muciniphila is consistently correlated with obesity. The causal beneficial impact of A. muciniphila treatment on obesity is coming to light, having been proved by a variety of animal models and human studies. A. muciniphila has been characterized as a beneficial player in body metabolism and has great prospects for treatments of the metabolic disorders associated with obesity, as well as being considered for next-generation therapeutic agents. This paper aimed to investigate the basic mechanism underlying the relation of A. muciniphila to obesity and its host interactions, as identified in recent discoveries, facilitating the establishment of the causal relationship in A. muciniphila-associated therapeutic supplement in humans.Entities:
Keywords: Akkermansia muciniphila; immunity; lipid modulation; nutrition therapy; obesity
Year: 2020 PMID: 32153527 PMCID: PMC7046546 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.00219
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
FIGURE 1Molecular modulation of A. muciniphila in lipid and liver disorder: in yellow are the circulation mechanisms of A. muciniphila in hyperlipidemia and liver disorder. In green are the metabolite mechanisms of A. muciniphila in lipid metabolism in tissue and atherosclerosis.
FIGURE 2Cross talk in host-A. muciniphila interactions and the associated improvement in obesity disease. After the colonization of A. muciniphila, the state of homeostasis and symbiotic relationships is improved by immunity activity. This state includes obesity and its associated liver disorder changes in the host; the gut barrier is restored either physically (at the mucous layer or the level of tight junctions) or at the level of the gut ecosystem, and reduced inflammatory responses are often induced by endotoxemia or LPS via TLRs and downstream cytokines, which improve intestinal permeability. TG, total triglyceride; ALT, Alanine Aminotransferase; AST, Aspartate Aminotransferase; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; TLR, Toll-like receptors; IFNγ, Interferon-γ; TNF, tumor necrosis factor, IL-2, interleukin-2.
FIGURE 3Mechanisms of signaling due to A. muciniphila action in obesity. A. muciniphila can decrease the serum level of inflammatory cytokines such as IL-2, IFN-γ, IL-12p40, and MCP-1. Meanwhile, A. muciniphila decreases the lipid overload process associated with the LDL receptor pathway by decreasing apoB48 and apoB100 on LDLs. Moreover, short-chain fatty acid production stimulated by A. muciniphila is involved in signaling to the host by inhibiting histone deacetylase (HDAC) or by activating G-protein-coupled receptors, which triggers other metabolic pathways, together resulting in immune stimulation including macrophage transmigration and Treg proliferation changes. A. muciniphila regulates the intestinal permeability and gut barrier by tight-junction proteins such as Claudin 3 (Cldn3), Occludi(Ocln), and Cannabinoid Receptor 1 (Cnr1) and reverses the high enzyme expression of flavin-containing monooxygenase 3 (FMO3), which modulates TMA conversion into TMAO in the liver.
Overview of A. muciniphila and its associated biomarkers in clinical studies of obesity.
| ( | 81 Patients with T2DM | A reduced-energy diet | 3 months | Dietary portfolio consumption increased levels of |
| ( | 60 patients, overweight and with obese diabetes | 600mg/d butyrate, 10 g/d inulin powder, both inulin and butyrate or placebo | 45 days | Supplementation of insulin and butyrate can increase |
| ( | 28 obese men with metabolic syndrome | 1 g polyphenol resveratrol orally twice daily or placebo | 35 days | Polyphenol resveratrol improves glucose homeostasis and increases the abundance of |
| ( | 134 Danish adults with prediabetes and 134 healthy controls | Observation | The abundance of the mucin-degrading bacterium | |
| ( | 49 adults, overweight and obese | 6-week calorie restriction | 12 weeks | |
| ( | 43 hypercholesterolemic patients and 19 healthy controls | 27 patients with Atorvastatin treatment | 2 years | Atorvastatin treatment increased the abundance of |
| ( | 70 female patients with T2DM and 70 healthy females. | Observation | Decreased | |
| ( | 16 infants with obese mother and 256 infants of normal mothers as control | Observation | Prevalence of | |
| ( | 28 participants with diabetes and 84 healthy controls | Metformin | Diabetes patients taking metformin had a higher relative abundance of | |
| ( | 13 morbidly obese patients | Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) | 12 months | RYGB changed the relative abundances of 31 species, including |
| ( | 53 women with obesity | Observation | 140 metagenomic species, including | |
| ( | 21 patients with T2DM | Duodenal-jejunal bypass surgery medical care | 12 months | The level of gut |
| ( | 32 participants, overweight/obese insulin-resistant | Oral supplementation of 1010 A. muciniphila bacteria, either live or pasteurized | 3 months |