| Literature DB >> 35444959 |
Jing Liu1, Dakai Yang2, Xiaojing Wang3, Paul Tetteh Asare4, Qingwen Zhang1, Lixin Na1, Lei Shao3.
Abstract
The liver is directly connected to the intestines through the portal vein, which enables the gut microbiota and gut-derived products to influence liver health. There is accumulating evidence of decreased gut flora diversity and alcohol sensitivity in patients with various chronic liver diseases, including non-alcoholic/alcoholic liver disease, chronic hepatitis virus infection, primary sclerosing cholangitis and liver cirrhosis. Increased intestinal mucosal permeability and decline in barrier function were also found in these patients. Followed by bacteria translocation and endotoxin uptake, these will lead to systemic inflammation. Specific microbiota and microbiota-derived metabolites are altered in various chronic liver diseases studies, but the complex interaction between the gut microbiota and liver is missing. This review article discussed the bidirectional relationship between the gut and the liver, and explained the mechanisms of how the gut microbiota ecosystem alteration affects the pathogenesis of chronic liver diseases. We presented gut-microbiota targeted interventions that could be the new promising method to manage chronic liver diseases.Entities:
Keywords: bile acids; choline; chronic liver diseases; gut microbiota; prebiotics; probiotics
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35444959 PMCID: PMC9014089 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2022.774335
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 6.073
Figure 1The Etiological Mechanism of bi-direction circulation between the intestine and the liver. The liver communicates with the gut through the portal veins, bile duct, and circulation system. Under pathological conditions of the liver, the gut microbiota dysbiosis could be found. The beneficial bacteria such as Akkermansia muciniphila decreased, and pathogenic bacteria such as Enterobacteriaceae increased. Following the production of SCFAs (butyrate) decreased, the production of antimicrobial molecules (IgA) reduced, tight junction integrity was disrupted, and intestinal permeability increased. LPS, β-glucan, and MAMPs moved from the gut lumen into the portal circulation, and translocate to the liver through portal veins. LPS activates pathogen recognition receptor TLR4 on liver resident macrophages Kupffer cells and hepatic stellate cells. The TLR4 signal in Kupffer cells triggers a downstream inflammatory cascade reaction to mediate the activation of TNF-α and IL-8. The TLR4 signal also promotes fibrosis in hepatocytes. On the other hand, fibrosis alters bile acid homeostasis and contributes to gut dysbiosis. Gut bacteria can express bile salt hydrolases to deconjugate primary bile acids. The 7α-dehydroxylase expressed by other bacteria can convert primary bile acids to secondary bile acids. In fibrosis, these bacteria decreased and reduced the conversion. Bile acids produced from the gut could bind to FXR, and produce FGF19, which reach the liver through the portal vein and down-regulates the synthesis of primary bile acids in hepatocytes by inhibiting cholesterol 7α-monooxygenase (CYP7A1) expression, further contributing to gut dysbiosis. lgA, immunoglobulin A; FXR, farnesoid X receptor; MAMPs, microbial-associated molecular patterns; SCFAs, short-chain free acids; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; TLR4, toll-like receptor 4; FGF19, fibroblast growth factor 19.
Alterations of gut microbiota compositions associated with Chronic Liver Disease.
| Comparison | Microbiota | Sample | Mechanism | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NASH patients vs Healthy control |
| stool | alcohol‐producing bacteria increased, supply a constant source of ROS, liver inflammation increased | ( |
| ALD patients vs Healthy control |
| colon contents | Beneficial bacteria decreased, intestinal permeability increased, bacterial endotoxins exposure systemic | ( |
| Severe AH patients vs Healthy control |
| stool | anti-inflammatory bacteria decrease, intestinal dysbiosis caused gut permeability, facilitates microbiota translocation | ( |
| Severe AH mice vs non-AH mice |
| stool | pro-inflammatory cytokine producing bacteria increased, anti-inflammatory bacteria decreased | ( |
| HBV patients vs Healthy control |
| stool | pathogens colonization in the gut, promote systemic inflammation and worsen hepatic dysfunction | ( |
| HCV patients vs Healthy control | Phylum: | stool | HCV infection induced intestine dysbiosis; carbohydrates concentrations increased by impairment in the intestine and the expansion of bacteria | ( |
| PSC patients vs Healthy control |
| stool | serum alkaline phosphatase increased | ( |
| PSC patients vs Healthy control |
| stool |
| ( |
| PSC patients vs Healthy control |
| Colon |
| ( |
| PSC patients vs Healthy control |
| stool |
| ( |
| Cirrhosis patients vs Healthy control |
| stool |
| ( |
| Cirrhosis patients vs Healthy control |
| stool | pathogenic taxa overgrowth is associated with disease progression and endotoxemia, the reduction taxa can produce SCFAs and anti-bacterial peptides. | ( |
| HE patients vs Healthy control |
| stool | Decreased bacteria associated with good cognition and decreased inflammation, increased bacteria linked to poor cognition and inflammation | ( |
| HCC patients vs cirrhosis |
| stool | hepatocarcinogenesis attributed to the | ( |
| HCC rats vs Healthy control |
| stool | Intestinal inflammation increased, probiotics decreased, which can inhibit the translocation of endotoxin, activation of DAMPs, reduce tumorigenic inflammation | ( |
A comparison of condition A vs condition B; ↑, increase in condition A related to condition B; ↓, decrease in condition A related to condition B.
Gut microbiota related strategies to manage chronic liver diseases.
| Strategies | Functional substance/Bacterial species | Mechanism of action | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diet | Lactulose | acidify the intestinal cavity, inhibit urease producing bacteria, and limit the diffusion of ammonia into blood | ( |
| BCAA (leucine, isoleucine and valine) | promote protein synthesis, reduces nitrogen-containing products and prevents the formation of pseudo-neurotransmitters, reduce the progression of liver failure | ( | |
| Thiamine; | restore the activity of PDH and KGDH, | ( | |
| SCFAs | activating G-protein coupled receptors or inhibiting histone deacetylase, anti-inflammatory properties of acetate and propionate, and their inhibitory effects on hepatic lipogenesis and lipid accumulation | ( | |
| Indole | enhance the tight junction of epithelial cells and mitigate inflammatory responses in the gut | ( | |
| Choline | removing fat from hepatocytes | ( | |
| Antibiotics |
| reduce the number of toxic metabolites produced by the GM and reduce serum pro-inflammatory cytokine | ( |
| Probiotics |
| increase in intestinal FFAs concentration | ( |
|
| reduction of alcohol-induced oxidative stress and restoration of barrier function | ( | |
|
| may restore phagocytosis of neutrophils by changing IL-10 secretion and TLR4 expression | ( | |
|
| reduced the risk of hospitalization for HE as well as improved Child-Turcotte-Pugh (CTP) and model for end-stage liver disease scores (MELD) in patients with cirrhosis | ( | |
| Prebiotics |
| restore the levels of | ( |
|
| promote fatty acid oxidation by up-regulating the expression of peroxidase, inhibit the expression of SREBP-2 in the liver and reduce the accumulation of cholesterol | ( | |
| Synbiotics |
| protect against inflammation and hepatocyte damage | ( |
| Fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) | feces bacteria from alcohol resistant mice | FMT prevented alcohol-induced intestinal disorders and fatty hepatitis | ( |
| fecal bacteria transplantation from health control | improve intestinal flora disorder, enhance intestinal barrier function and reduce liver steatosis | ( | |
| fecal bacteria transplantation from health control | effectively reduce alkaline phosphatase in some patients, the ALP level of some patients (30%) decreased, fecal flora diversity of all patients increased | ( | |
| FMT from the donor enriched in | serum IL-6 and LPS binding protein were decreased and butyrate/isobutyrate was increased in the FMT group compared with baseline | ( |
↑ means the abundance of bacteria increase; ↓ means the abundance of bacteria decrease.