微生物群
肥胖
生物
肠道微生物群
生理学
内分泌学
食品科学
医学
遗传学
作者
Benedikt Hild,Matthew S. Dreier,Ji Hoon Oh,John A. McCulloch,Jonathan H. Badger,Juen Guo,Claire E. Thefaine,Regina Umarova,Kevin D. Hall,Oksana Gavrilova,Stephan P. Rosshart,Giorgio Trinchieri,Barbara Rehermann
标识
DOI:10.1038/s42255-021-00439-y
摘要
Obesity and its consequences are among the greatest challenges in healthcare. The gut microbiome is recognized as a key factor in the pathogenesis of obesity. Using a mouse model, we show here that a wild-derived microbiome protects against excessive weight gain, severe fatty liver disease and metabolic syndrome during a 10-week course of high-fat diet. This phenotype is transferable only during the first weeks of life. In adult mice, neither transfer nor severe disturbance of the wild-type microbiome modifies the metabolic response to a high-fat diet. The protective phenotype is associated with increased secretion of metabolic hormones and increased energy expenditure through activation of brown adipose tissue. Thus, we identify a microbiome that protects against weight gain and its negative consequences through metabolic programming in early life. Translation of these results to humans may identify early-life therapeutics that protect against obesity.
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