| Literature DB >> 33490737 |
Jin Zhou1, Madhulika Tripathi1, Rohit A Sinha2, Brijesh Kumar Singh1, Paul M Yen1,3,4.
Abstract
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most prevalent liver disorder worldwide. It comprises a spectrum of conditions that range from steatosis to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, with progression to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. Currently, there is no FDA-approved pharmacological treatment for NAFLD. The pathogenesis of NAFLD involves genetic and environmental/host factors, including those that cause changes in intestinal microbiota and their metabolites. In this review, we discuss recent findings on the relationship(s) of microbiota signature with severity of NAFLD and the role(s) microbial metabolites in NAFLD progression. We discuss how metabolites may affect NAFLD progression and their potential to serve as biomarkers for NAFLD diagnosis or therapeutic targets for disease management.Entities:
Keywords: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease; gut microbiome; gut microbiota metabolites
Year: 2021 PMID: 33490737 PMCID: PMC7116620 DOI: 10.20517/2394-5079.2020.134
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepatoma Res ISSN: 2394-5079
Changes of microbiota in NAFLD patients
| Disease | Phylum | Family | Genus | Species |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NAFLD | Proteobacteria[ | Enterobacteriaceae[ | Escherichia[ | |
| Rikenellaceae[ | Dorea[ | |||
| Rumminoccaceae[ | Anaerosporobacter[ | |||
| Coprococcus[ | ||||
| Eubacterium[ | ||||
| Faecalibacterium[ | ||||
| Prevotella[ | ||||
| Liver fibrosis or cirrhosis | Proteobacteria[ | Enterobacteriaceae[ | Streptococcus[ | Escherichia coli[ |
| Fusobacteria[ | Gallibacterium[ | Bacteroides vulgatus[ | ||
| Bacteroidetes[ | Eubacterium rectale[ | |||
| Children with NASH | Prevotella copri[ |
NAFLD: non-alcoholic fatty liver; NASH: non-alcoholic fatty liver
Figure 1Gut microbial homeostatic balance is maintained under normal conditions. Gut microbiota produced SCFAs, namely acetate, butyrate, and propionate, influence hepatic metabolism by changing epigenetics/gene expression or directly via energy metabolism. Liver produced bile acids (such as cholic acids) are also processed by gut microbiota and released systemically. There is substantial microbial dysbiosis during NAFLD that causes SIBO of Gram-negative bacteria while reducing the overall microbial diversity. This bacterial overgrowth leads to produce proinflammatory molecules such as LPS, ethanol, TMAO, and bacterial 16sDNA. These proinflammatory molecules worsen the liver inflammation and fibrosis and potentially accelerate NAFLD progression. SCFAs: short chain fatty acids; SIBO: small intestinal bacterial overgrowth; LPS: Lipopolysaccharides; TMAO: trimethylamine N-oxide; NAFLD: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
The effects of microbiome products on the liver
| Microbiome products | Effects on Liver |
|---|---|
| Endotoxins, Bacterial DNA, Bacterial peptide glycans | Increase gut permeability, gut inflammation, liver steatosis, inflammation, and fibrosis |
| Altered bile metabolites | Increases liver bile acids conversion to unconjugated and dehydroxylated secondary bile acids (e.g., deoxycholic and lithocholic acids). Activates FXR to repress bile acid synthesis, regulate lipogenesis, and decrease fibrosis |
| Short-chain fatty acids (acetate. propionate, butyrate) | Stimulate gut endocrine cells to secret GLP-1 to increase hepatic fatty acid β-oxidation. Decrease endotoxin-producing bacteria. Acetate and butyrate can serve as precursors for hepatic lipogenesis; however, they also can increase PPARα-mediated β-oxidation of fatty acids and decrease hepatosteatosis |
| Ethanol | Increases gut permeability and LPS-mediated inflammation in liver. Potential direct toxic effects on liver |
| Choline/Choline-related metabolites | Convert choline into TMA and then oxidized into trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) in the liver. TMAO inhibits cholesterol conversion into bile acids. Associated with hepatosteatosis |
| Ammonia | May increase hepatosteatosis and hepatic stellate cell activation |
Clinical trials modulating microbiome or its metabolites for NAFLD patients
| Intervention | Potential agent | NCT number | Targeted conditions | Phase |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FXR agonist | obeticholic acid | NCT02548351 | NASH | Phase 3 |
| FXR agonist | Cilofexor | NCT03449446 | NASH | Phase 2 |
| FXR agonist | TERN-101 | NCT04328077 | NASH | Phase 2 |
| FXR agonist in combination with CCR2/5 antagonist | Tropifexor in combination with cenicriviroc | NCT03517540 | NASH | Phase 2 |
| Synbiotic | NCT01791959 | NASH | Phase 2 | |
| Antibiotic | Solithromycin | NCT02510599 | NASH | Phase 2 |
| Probiotics | NCT03585413 | NAFLD | Phase 3 | |
| FMT | NCT02496390 | NAFLD | Phase 2 | |
| FMT | NCT02970877 | NAFLD | Phase 2 |
FXR: farnesoid X receptor; FMT: Fecal Microbiota Transplantation; NASH: non-alcoholic steatohepatitis; NAFLD: non-alcoholic fatty liver