| Literature DB >> 34884466 |
Dahai Yu1, Xin Meng1, Willem M de Vos2,3, Hao Wu4, Xuexun Fang1, Amit K Maiti5.
Abstract
Humans, throughout the life cycle, from birth to death, are accompanied by the presence of gut microbes. Environmental factors, lifestyle, age and other factors can affect the balance of intestinal microbiota and their impact on human health. A large amount of data show that dietary, prebiotics, antibiotics can regulate various diseases through gut microbes. In this review, we focus on the role of gut microbes in the development of metabolic, gastrointestinal, neurological, immune diseases and, cancer. We also discuss the interaction between gut microbes and the host with respect to their beneficial and harmful effects, including their metabolites, microbial enzymes, small molecules and inflammatory molecules. More specifically, we evaluate the potential ability of gut microbes to cure diseases through Fecal Microbial Transplantation (FMT), which is expected to become a new type of clinical strategy for the treatment of various diseases.Entities:
Keywords: FMT; bacteria; disease; gut; microbiota
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34884466 PMCID: PMC8657718 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222312661
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1A PRISMA flow diagram of articles in PUBMED for gut microbiota. Texts in the diagram are used in search item and number (n) of articles showed up in PUBMED.
Figure 2Gut microbiome in health and diseases. Gut microbes have impacts on both infectious diseases and complex diseases. Their metabolites can be directly involved to induce disease symptoms, for examples, diarrhea, colitis, etc. Although the gut microbiome may not directly induce complex diseases, such as CRC, autoimmune diseases and neuronal diseases, etc., they have profound effects on disease symptoms. As complex diseases occur due to interaction of genetic and environmental factors, gut microbes and their metabolites could play important roles as environmental factors and to help in shaping or reducing these symptoms. However, antibiotics affect the microbial population and have an overall adverse effect on human health.
Microbiota associated in diseases. The abundance of bacteria identified in various diseases.
| Cells/Tissue/Other | Host | Disease | Methods | Bacteria Identified/Increased | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small intestine | Human | Digestive tract diseases | 16S RNA | [ | |
| Intestinal tract cells | Mouse | Digestive tract diseases | IgA seq | Prevotellaceae, | [ |
| Ilium and rectum | Human | IBD | 16S RNA |
| [ |
| ileocecal biopsies | Human | PSC-IBD and UC | 16S RNA | [ | |
| Large intestine | Human | IBS | RT-QPCR | [ | |
| Colon and caecum | Mice | Osmotic diarrhea | 16S RNA |
| [ |
| Blood, stool, urine | Human | Anxiety and Depression in IBS | fMRI | [ | |
| Fecal sample | Human | ASD | 16 S RNA | [ | |
| Fecal sample | Human | Schizophrenia | Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy | [ | |
| Frozen brain Biopsy | Human | Alzheimer’s | 16S RNA and Nextgen Sequencing | [ | |
| Fecal sample | Human | Parkinson Disease | RT-QPCR | Enterobacteriaceae | [ |
| Fecal sample | Human | Diabetes | 16S RNA | Bacteriodes, bifidobacteria, Clostridium | [ |
| Cecum | Mice | Obesity | 16S RNA | Firmicutes and Bacteriodetes | [ |
| Fecal sample | Human | Gaut | 16S RNA | [ | |
| Fecal sample | Human | Hypertension | Metagenome shotgun sequencing | [ | |
| Fecal sample | Human | Atherosclerosis | Metagenome shotgun sequencing |
| [ |
| Fecal sample | Human | Colorectal cancer | RT-QPCR |
| [ |
| Fecal sample | Human | Colorectal Cancer | 16S RNA, NextGen sequencing |
| [ |
| Fecal sample | Human | Allergy | 16S RNA | Enterobacteriaceae and Parabacteroides | [ |
Figure 3Feedback mechanism of axis of gut-brain. Metabolites secreted by microbiotas are absorbed in gut epithelia, through which they can reach the brain through bloodstream by crossing BBB. They activate the brain to secret hormones and neurotransmitters, which can regulate gut microbes and intestinal activities.
Figure 4The role of A. muciniphila in regulating various diseases. Akkermansia appears to be a beneficial bacterium for human health and is associated with many disease symptoms. Its population increases through dietary constituents such as cranberry extract or drug metformin whereas decreases as a result of a high fat diet or intestinal fat content. Akkermansia metabolites increases SCFAs that in turn regulate GPR43 or IFNγ to inhibit Treg, which reduces inflammation, symptoms of asthma and allergy. They also help to enhance metformin effect to increase insulin sensitivity. It also plays a role to reduce inflammation and development of T1D. FMT of Akkermansia has been proved to prevent or delay the onset of T1D and T2D. Akkermansia transplantation could be developed as a potential therapeutic agent for diabetes, allergy and asthma.