| Literature DB >> 34880502 |
Leviel Fluhr1, Uria Mor1, Aleksandra A Kolodziejczyk1, Mally Dori-Bachash1, Avner Leshem1,2, Shlomik Itav1, Yotam Cohen1, Jotham Suez1, Niv Zmora1,3,4, Claudia Moresi1, Shahar Molina1, Niv Ayalon1, Rafael Valdés-Mas1, Shanni Hornstein1, Hodaya Karbi1, Denise Kviatcovsky1, Adi Livne1, Aurelie Bukimer1, Shimrit Eliyahu-Miller1, Alona Metz1, Alexander Brandis5, Tevie Mehlman5, Yael Kuperman6, Michael Tsoory6, Noa Stettner6, Alon Harmelin6, Hagit Shapiro7, Eran Elinav8,9.
Abstract
Cigarette smoking constitutes a leading global cause of morbidity and preventable death1, and most active smokers report a desire or recent attempt to quit2. Smoking-cessation-induced weight gain (SCWG; 4.5 kg reported to be gained on average per 6-12 months, >10 kg year-1 in 13% of those who stopped smoking3) constitutes a major obstacle to smoking abstinence4, even under stable5,6 or restricted7 caloric intake. Here we use a mouse model to demonstrate that smoking and cessation induce a dysbiotic state that is driven by an intestinal influx of cigarette-smoke-related metabolites. Microbiome depletion induced by treatment with antibiotics prevents SCWG. Conversely, fecal microbiome transplantation from mice previously exposed to cigarette smoke into germ-free mice naive to smoke exposure induces excessive weight gain across diets and mouse strains. Metabolically, microbiome-induced SCWG involves a concerted host and microbiome shunting of dietary choline to dimethylglycine driving increased gut energy harvest, coupled with the depletion of a cross-regulated weight-lowering metabolite, N-acetylglycine, and possibly by the effects of other differentially abundant cigarette-smoke-related metabolites. Dimethylglycine and N-acetylglycine may also modulate weight and associated adipose-tissue immunity under non-smoking conditions. Preliminary observations in a small cross-sectional human cohort support these findings, which calls for larger human trials to establish the relevance of this mechanism in active smokers. Collectively, we uncover a microbiome-dependent orchestration of SCWG that may be exploitable to improve smoking-cessation success and to correct metabolic perturbations even in non-smoking settings.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34880502 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04194-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962