| Literature DB >> 35743626 |
Davide Agnoletti1,2, Federica Piani1,2, Arrigo F G Cicero1,2, Claudio Borghi1,2.
Abstract
The gut microbiota is a critical regulator of human physiology, deleterious changes to its composition and function (dysbiosis) have been linked to the development and progression of cardiovascular diseases. Vascular ageing (VA) is a process of progressive stiffening of the arterial tree associated with arterial wall remodeling, which can precede hypertension and organ damage, and is associated with cardiovascular risk. Arterial stiffness has become the preferred marker of VA. In our systematic review, we found an association between gut microbiota composition and arterial stiffness, with two patterns, in most animal and human studies: a direct correlation between arterial stiffness and abundances of bacteria associated with altered gut permeability and inflammation; an inverse relationship between arterial stiffness, microbiota diversity, and abundances of bacteria associated with most fit microbiota composition. Interventional studies were able to show a stable link between microbiota modification and arterial stiffness only in animals. None of the human interventional trials was able to demonstrate this relationship, and very few adjusted the analyses for determinants of arterial stiffness. We observed a lack of large randomized interventional trials in humans that test the role of gut microbiota modifications on arterial stiffness, and take into account BP and hemodynamic alterations.Entities:
Keywords: arterial stiffness; central hemodynamics; gut microbiome; gut microbiota; inflammation; oxidative stress; pulse wave velocity; vascular ageing
Year: 2022 PMID: 35743626 PMCID: PMC9224769 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11123557
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.964
Figure 1Schemes of the intercorrelation between environmental and biological mechanisms, gut microbiota, and vascular ageing.
Figure 2Flow diagram of the Systematic Review.
Characteristics of animal studies.
| Authors |
| Marker of VA | Intervention | Duration | Effect on Vascular Ageing | Mechanisms Linked to Microbiota |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guirro, M., 2020 [ | 48 | Neuraminidase circulating levels | Hesperidin treatment; two diets for 9 wk ( | 9 weeks of diet + 8 weeks of hesperidin | CAF feeding resulted in increased endothelial dysfunction, arterial stiffness, and inflammation. | Urinary metabolites of hesperidin were positively correlated with Bacteroidaceae family. |
| Liu, H., 2020 [ | 35 | PWV at the left common carotid artery | Gavage with feces from either healthy donors (controls) or myocardial infarction patients (CAD) + high fat diet | 12 weeks | Mice treated with CAD feces had higher vascular stiffness than controls (Controls: 2.75 ± 0.29 m/s vs. CAD: 3.59 ± 0.27 m/s; | In mice treated with CAD feces: increased LPS and pro-inflammatory cytokines; increased activated TH17 cells; reduced Treg cells. |
| Battson, M.L., 2019 [ | 40 | AorticPWV (doppler) | Fecal transplantation, | 8 weeks | Control mice receiving microbiota of obese subjects had higher PWV. | Obese mice had reduced |
| Natarajan, N., 2016 [ | 10 | Aortic stiffness (PWV by doppler and ex vivo) | Gpr41 KO group vs Grp41 WT group | 3 and 6 months | At 6 months PWV was significantly higher in KO mice vs WT mice, with similar compliance in ex vivo analysis, suggesting functional vascular alteration. | Gpr41 (SCFA receptor) localizes in the vascular endothelium. Vascular endothelium is essential for SCFA-mediated vasodilation to occur, as vasodilation is absent in endothelium-denuded vessels ex vivo. |
| Edwards, J.M., 2020 [ | 12 | Resistance arteries stiffness (ex vivo) | Ex vivo evaluation of vascular stiffness | Resistance arteries from male GF mice present increased vascular stiffness. No changes in vascular stiffness in arteries from female mice. No BP data. | Microbiota influenced the vasoconstriction response. | |
| Cross, T.W.L., 2017 [ | 40 | Aortic PWV (doppler) | Ovariectomy vs sham surgery; soy-rich vs soy-free diet | 28 weeks | PWV was lowered with soy feeding but was not affected by ovariectomy. No BP data. | Soy-rich diet modified intestinal microbiota composition (lower F:B ratio). |
| Battson, M.L., 2018 [ | 36 | Aortic PWV (doppler) | Standard diet (SD) ( | 7 months | PWV progressively increased in WD mice during the 7-month intervention. In WD + Abx, PWV was completely normalized to SD levels. No BP data. | WD had increased Firmicutes and decreased Bacteroidetes and Actinobacteria. Abundance of numerous bacterial taxa were altered by diet; in particular, |
| Brunt, V.E., 2019 [ | 73 | Aortic PWV (doppler); ex vivo intrinsic mechanical stiffness | Cocktail of broad-spectrum, poorly absorbed antibiotics in drinking water vs placebo. 4 groups: young controls (YC); young antibiotics (YA); old controls (OC); old antibiotics (OA). | 3–4 weeks | At baseline, PWV was higher in OC and OA vs YC ( | Ageing was associated with greater alpha diversity. Old mice demonstrated several bacterial markers of gut dysbiosis and/or inflammation. Three-fold age-related increase in circulating plasma TMAO levels. In both young and old mice, antibiotic treatment suppressed TMAO levels. |
| Lee, D.M., 2018 [ | 47 | Aortic PWV (doppler); ex vivo | (1) standard diet; (2) standard diet + dapagliflozin (60 mg dapagliflozin/kg diet). Controls ( | 8 weeks | Dapagliflozin treatment improved both endothelium-dependent dilatation (EDD) and Endothelium-independent dilation (EID) in Db mice. PWV was negatively and EID-EDD positively correlated with | Significantly reduced richness and diversity in the Db + dapa group compared to controls. |
| Lee, D.M., 2020 [ | 48 | Aortic PWV (doppler) | Standard (SD) vs Western diet (WD). Indole-3-propionic acid (IPA) vs placebo. (1) SD + placebo, (2) WD +placebo, (3) SD + IPA, 4) WD + IPA. ( | 5 months | IPA supplementation did not affect PWV in WD, but impaired PWV in SD. | WD feeding decreased |
| Trikha, S.R.J., 2021 [ | 10 | Aortic PWV (doppler) | 2 age-matched male and 2 female (1 of each lean [LM], and 1 obese [OBM]) microbiota donors to form cohorts 1 and 2 of inoculated mice. | PWV was increased in OBM mice vs. GF mice. In cohort 2, OBM mice displayed a marked increase in PWV vs. LM mice. | Mouse microbiota profiles clustered according to their transplant donor groups. |
VA stands for Vascular ageing; SBP, systolic blood pressure; PWV, pulse wave velocity; LPS, lipopolysaccharides; Gpr, G-protein coupled receptor; SCFA, short-chain fatty acid; GF, germ-free; F:B, Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio; TMAO, trimethylamine-N-oxide.
Characteristics of human studies.
| Authors |
| Marker of VA | Intervention | Duration | Effect on Vascular Ageing | Mechanisms Linked to Microbiota |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rodriguez-Mateos, A., 2018 [ | 45 | cfPWV | DP1-10 group: cocoa extract with 690 mg (130 mg epicatechin; 560 mg DP2-10 procyanidins). | 1 month | DP1-10 group: decrease in PWV at 1 mo of −1.0 m/s (95% CI: −1.6, −0.4 m/s) compared with the control and of −0.8 m/s (95% CI: −1.4, −0.2 m/s) compared with DP2-10. | Epicatechin is absorbed via the colon after catabolism by the microbiota; Pro-cyanidins are also subject to microbiome-mediated catabolism. |
| Istas, G., 2019 [ | 66 | cfPWV; AIx | Aronia whole fruit capsule: 12 mg (poly)phenols; aronia extract capsule: 116 mg (poly)phenols. | Acute: 0–2 h Chronic: 0–12 weeks | No significant difference in PWV and BP. | The aronia extract group: higher abundance of |
| Taniguchi, H., 2018 [ | 33 | CAVI | Exercise program ( | 10 weeks | Changes in | Diversity and composition of microbiota were not affected by exercise; exercise increased the relative abundance of |
| Menni, C., 2018 [ | 617 | cfPWV | Observational study in female twins. | N/a | Carotid-femoral PWV is inversely correlated with gut microbiome diversity and with the abundance of specific microbes in the gut (Ruminococcaceae family bacteria). | N/a |
| Biruete, A., 2019 [ | 10 | cfPWV | Observational study in hemodialysis patients. | N/a | N/a | |
| Ponziani, F.R., 2017 [ | 39 | Carotid PWV | Patients with small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO). | N/a | PWV was increased in the SIBO group compared to the no-SIBO group (10.25 m/s vs 7.68 m/s; | Dietary vitamin-K2 intake does not correlate with vitamin-K2 status (measured by dp-ucMGP serum levels). The gut microbiota is crucial for overcoming dietary vitamin-K2 insufficiencies. |
| Ried, K., 2018 [ | 49 | cfPWV (tonometry) | Kyolic Aged Garlic Extract vs placebo. | 12 weeks | No significant differences in PWV between groups and intra-group before and after treatment. | Increase of |
| Hazim, S., 2016 [ | 28 | cfPWV | Soy isoflavones acute supplementation. | 3 days | Acute soy intakes modified cfPWV only in equol producer subjects at 24 h; | N/a |
| Huang, J., 2020 [ | 24 | AIx75; SEVR | Obese individuals underwent exercise: endurance/strength training 5 h/day, 6 days/week; diet: calorie-restricted. | 6 weeks | Significant increase of SEVR; reduction of AIx. | Increase in intestinal microbial diversity; abundance of |
| Dinakis, E., 2021 [ | 69 | AASI | Observational study. | No associations were found between alpha diversity and AASI; no significant clustering patterns of AASI; Small but positive correlation between plasma butyrate levels and AASI. | AASI was associated with lower abundance of | |
| Liu, X., 2022 [ | 12 | baPWV/FMD | 2 eggs/day in healthy young men. | 2 weeks | Egg consumption improved baPWV and FMD. | No change in taxonomy, alpha and beta diversity; reduced tryptophan degradation. |
| Hsu, C.N., 2018 [ | 86 | carotid-PWV (echo-tracking) | Observational study on children and adolescents with chronic kidney disease (CKD). | N/a | Carotid-PWV was elevated in children with CKD and eGFR category G2–G3 compared to those with eGFR category G1. | CKD children with an abnormal ABPM profile had lower abundance of the genus |
VA stands for Vascular ageing; SBP, systolic blood pressure; cfPWV, carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity; CAVI, cardio-ankle vascular index; MAP, mean arterial pressure; AIx75, augmentation index corrected for heart rate at 75 bpm; SEVR, sub-endocardial viability ratio; AASI, ambulatory arterial stiffness index; baPWV, brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity; FMD, flow-mediated dilation; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; eGFR categories: G1 ≥ 90 mL/min/1.73 m2, G2 50–89, G3 30–59; ABPM, ambulatory blood pressure measurement; TMAO, trimethylamine-N-oxide.