生物
肥胖
人口
内分泌学
内科学
肠道菌群
代谢综合征
2型糖尿病
炎症
胰岛素抵抗
产热
碳水化合物代谢
糖尿病
微生物群
脂肪组织
免疫学
医学
生物信息学
环境卫生
作者
Tiphaine Le Roy,Emilie Moens de Hase,Matthias Van Hul,Adrien Paquot,Rudy Pelicaen,Marion Régnier,Clara Depommier,Céline Druart,Amandine Everard,Dominique Maiter,Nathalie M. Delzenne,Laure B. Bindels,Marie de Barsy,Audrey Loumaye,Michel P. Hermans,Jean‐Paul Thissen,Sara Vieira‐Silva,Gwen Falony,Jeroen Raes,Giulio G. Muccioli,Patrice D. Cani
出处
期刊:Gut
[BMJ]
日期:2021-06-08
卷期号:71 (3): 534-543
被引量:102
标识
DOI:10.1136/gutjnl-2020-323778
摘要
Objective To investigate the abundance and the prevalence of Dysosmobacter welbionis J115 T , a novel butyrate-producing bacterium isolated from the human gut both in the general population and in subjects with metabolic syndrome. To study the impact of this bacterium on host metabolism using diet-induced obese and diabetic mice. Design We analysed the presence and abundance of the bacterium in 11 984 subjects using four human cohorts (ie, Human Microbiome Project, American Gut Project, Flemish Gut Flora Project and Microbes4U). Then, we tested the effects of daily oral gavages with live D. welbionis J115 T on metabolism and several hallmarks of obesity, diabetes, inflammation and lipid metabolism in obese/diabetic mice. Results This newly identified bacterium was detected in 62.7%–69.8% of the healthy population. Strikingly, in obese humans with a metabolic syndrome, the abundance of Dysosmobacter genus correlates negatively with body mass index, fasting glucose and glycated haemoglobin. In mice, supplementation with live D. welbionis J115 T , but not with the pasteurised bacteria, partially counteracted diet-induced obesity development, fat mass gain, insulin resistance and white adipose tissue hypertrophy and inflammation. In addition, live D. welbionis J115 T administration protected the mice from brown adipose tissue inflammation in association with increased mitochondria number and non-shivering thermogenesis. These effects occurred with minor impact on the mouse intestinal microbiota composition. Conclusions These results suggest that D. welbionis J115 T directly and beneficially influences host metabolism and is a strong candidate for the development of next-generation beneficial bacteria targeting obesity and associated metabolic diseases.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI