| Literature DB >> 33227973 |
Chih-Fan Yeh1,2, Ying-Hsien Chen1, Sheng-Fu Liu3, Hsien-Li Kao1, Ming-Shiang Wu4, Kai-Chien Yang1,2,5,6, Wei-Kai Wu7.
Abstract
Inflammation is the key for the initiation and progression of atherosclerosis. Accumulating evidence has revealed that an altered gut microbiome (dysbiosis) triggers both local and systemic inflammation to cause chronic inflammatory diseases, including atherosclerosis. There have been some microbiome-relevant pro-inflammatory mechanisms proposed to link the relationships between dysbiosis and atherosclerosis such as gut permeability disruption, trigger of innate immunity from lipopolysaccharide (LPS), and generation of proatherogenic metabolites, such as trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO). Meanwhile, immune responses, such as inflammasome activation and cytokine production, could reshape both composition and function of the microbiota. In fact, the immune system delicately modulates the interplay between microbiota and atherogenesis. Recent clinical trials have suggested the potential of immunomodulation as a treatment strategy of atherosclerosis. Here in this review, we present current knowledge regarding to the roles of microbiota in contributing atherosclerotic pathogenesis and highlight translational perspectives by discussing the mutual interplay between microbiota and immune system on atherogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: atherosclerosis; dysbiosis; gut microbiota; immune system; metabolites
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33227973 PMCID: PMC7699263 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21228729
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Microbiota-related pathways in atherosclerosis.
Figure 2Role of macrophages in atherosclerosis.
Action of microbial metabolites on atherosclerosis.
| Metabolite | Precursor | Gut Microbial Metabolism | Site of Action | Atherosclerosis Effect | Physiological Action | Mechanism in Atherosclerosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bile acid | Primary bile acids [ | Dehydroxylation, | FXR [ | Undetermined | Increase insulin resistance | FXR-dependent [ |
| TGR5 [ | Improve insulin resistance | |||||
| TMAO | Choline | TMA-lyase ( | Proatherogenic [ | Induce vascular inflammation [ | Upregulate multiple macrophage scavenger receptors [ | |
| SCFA | Dietary fiber [ | Wood-Ljungdahl pathway | Olfr78 [ | Atheroprotective [ | Decrease blood pressure [ | Induce GLP-1 [ |
| PAGln | Phenylalanine [ | Pyruvate ferredoxin, oxidoreductase A (PorA) | Adrenergic receptors [ | Proatherogenic [ | Increase platelet reactivity [ | Induce thrombosis [ |
FXR: farnesoid X receptor, GLP-1: glucagon-like peptide-1, PAGln: phenylacetylglutamine, PPARγ: peroxisome proliferator–activated receptor-γ, RCT: reverse cholesterol transport, SCFA: short-chain fatty acid, TGR5: Takeda G-protein coupled bile acid receptor, TMAO: trimethylamine N-oxide, VEGF-C: vascular endothelial growth factor C.
Figure 3Mutual interplay of microbiota and immune system on atherogenesis.
Summary of important studies.
| Reference | Model | Aim of Study | Experiment Design | Main Finding |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Human | Gut flora-dependent metabolism of dietary phosphatidylcholine on CVD pathogenesis | Metabolomics approach in human cohort | Dietary supplementation with choline or TMAO promoted upregulation of macrophage scavenger receptors linked to atherosclerosis, and aggravated atherosclerosis |
| [ | Human | Role of gut microbiota on TMAO production from dietary L-carnitine and relationship of TMAO and CVD risk | Metabolomics approach | L-carnitine supplementation significantly altered cecal microbial composition, markedly enhanced synthesis of TMA/TMAO, and increased atherosclerosis |
| [ | Human | Identifying novel pathways linked to CVD | Metabolomics approach in CVD vs. non-CVD patients | PAGln represents a new CVD-promoting gut microbiota-dependent metabolite that signals via adrenergic receptors |
| [ | Mouse | Mechanism of HDL promoting regression of atherosclerosis | Aortic transplantation | HDL as a regulator of the migration and inflammation of monocyte-derived cells in murine atherosclerotic plaques |
| [ | Mouse | Effect of simvastatin on macrophages and plaque regression | Nanoparticle-based delivery of simvastatin in mice with advanced atherosclerotic plaques | Pharmacologically inhibiting local macrophage proliferation can effectively treat inflammation in atherosclerosis |
| [ | Human | Feasibility of reducing inflammation to decrease the risk of CVD clinically | Canakinumab 150mg every 3 months, randomized controlled and double blind trial | Antiinflammatory therapy targeting the IL-1β led to a significantly lower rate of recurrent cardiovascular events |
| [ | Mouse | Role of RegIIIγ on the bacterial colonization of the mucosal surface | RegIIIγ is a fundamental immune mechanism that promotes host-bacterial mutualism by regulating the spatial relationships between microbiota and host | |
| [ | Mouse | Role of IL-23 on atherosclerosis | Bone marrow deletion of IL-23 | The IL-23-IL-22 signaling as a regulator of atherosclerosis that restrains expansion of pro-atherogenic microbiota |
| [ | Mouse | Impact of microbiota from | FMT from | FMT of proinflammatory |
| [ | Mouse | Role of | ||
| [ | Human | Role of TMAO on platelet activity and thrombosis | In vivo FeCl3-induced thrombosis model | Gut microbes, via generation of TMAO, can directly modulate platelet hyperresponsiveness and clot formation rate in vivo |
| [ | Mouse | Effect of butyrate-producing bacteria on atherosclerosis | FMT of either low or high butyrate-producing human microbiota to GF mice | Colonization with butyrate producing |
| [ | Mouse | Effect of gut microbial transplantation from high to low TMAO-producing mice on atherosclerosis susceptibility | FMT from high to low TMAO-producing mice | Atherosclerosis susceptibility may be transmitted via transplantation of gut microbiota |
CVD: cardiovascular disease, FISH: fluorescence in situ hybridization, FMT: fecal microbial transplantation, GF: germ-free, HDL: high-density lipoprotein, LDLR: low-density lipoprotein receptor, PAGln: phenylacetylglutamine, TMAO: trimethylamine N-oxide.