Alimentary Pharmabiotic Centre, University College Cork, Ireland.
Gut. 2010 Dec;59(12):1635-42. doi: 10.1136/gut.2010.215665. Epub 2010 Oct 6.
Increased efficiency of energy harvest, due to alterations in the gut microbiota (increased Firmicutes and decreased Bacteroidetes), has been implicated in obesity in mice and humans. However, a causal relationship is unproven and contributory variables include diet, genetics and age. Therefore, we explored the effect of a high-fat (HF) diet and genetically determined obesity (ob/ob) for changes in microbiota and energy harvesting capacity over time.
Seven-week-old male ob/ob mice were fed a low-fat diet and wild-type mice were fed either a low-fat diet or a HF-diet for 8 weeks (n=8/group). They were assessed at 7, 11 and 15 weeks of age for: fat and lean body mass (by NMR); faecal and caecal short-chain fatty acids (SCFA, by gas chromatography); faecal energy content (by bomb calorimetry) and microbial composition (by metagenomic pyrosequencing).
A progressive increase in Firmicutes was confirmed in both HF-fed and ob/ob mice reaching statistical significance in the former, but this phylum was unchanged over time in the lean controls. Reductions in Bacteroidetes were also found in ob/ob mice. However, changes in the microbiota were dissociated from markers of energy harvest. Thus, although the faecal energy in the ob/ob mice was significantly decreased at 7 weeks, and caecal SCFA increased, these did not persist and faecal acetate diminished over time in both ob/ob and HF-fed mice, but not in lean controls. Furthermore, the proportion of the major phyla did not correlate with energy harvest markers.
The relationship between the microbial composition and energy harvesting capacity is more complex than previously considered. While compositional changes in the faecal microbiota were confirmed, this was primarily a feature of high-fat feeding rather than genetically induced obesity. In addition, changes in the proportions of the major phyla were unrelated to markers of energy harvest which changed over time. The possibility of microbial adaptation to diet and time should be considered in future studies.
由于肠道微生物群(Firmicutes 增加和 Bacteroidetes 减少)的改变,能量采集效率的提高与小鼠和人类肥胖有关。然而,因果关系尚未得到证实,促成变量包括饮食、遗传和年龄。因此,我们探讨了高脂肪(HF)饮食和遗传肥胖(ob/ob)对肠道微生物群和能量采集能力随时间变化的影响。
将 7 周龄雄性 ob/ob 小鼠喂食低脂饮食,野生型小鼠喂食低脂饮食或 HF 饮食 8 周(每组 8 只)。在 7、11 和 15 周龄时评估以下指标:脂肪和瘦肉量(通过 NMR 评估);粪便和盲肠短链脂肪酸(SCFA,通过气相色谱法评估);粪便能量含量(通过弹式量热法评估)和微生物组成(通过宏基因组焦磷酸测序评估)。
在 HF 饮食喂养的小鼠和 ob/ob 小鼠中,Firmicutes 的比例逐渐增加,前者达到统计学意义,但在 lean 对照组中,该菌门随时间没有变化。ob/ob 小鼠中 Bacteroidetes 的比例也有所下降。然而,微生物群的变化与能量采集标志物无关。因此,尽管 ob/ob 小鼠的粪便能量在 7 周时显著降低,盲肠 SCFA 增加,但这些变化并没有持续存在,并且 ob/ob 和 HF 饮食喂养的小鼠的粪便乙酸随时间减少,但 lean 对照组则没有。此外,主要菌门的比例与能量采集标志物无关。
微生物组成与能量采集能力之间的关系比之前认为的更为复杂。虽然确认了粪便微生物群的组成变化,但这主要是高脂肪饮食的特征,而不是遗传诱导的肥胖。此外,主要菌门的比例变化与随时间变化的能量采集标志物无关。在未来的研究中,应该考虑微生物对饮食和时间的适应性。