Korpela Katri, Flint Harry J, Johnstone Alexandra M, Lappi Jenni, Poutanen Kaisa, Dewulf Evelyne, Delzenne Nathalie, de Vos Willem M, Salonen Anne
Immunobiology Research Program, Department of Bacteriology and Immunology, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Rowett Institute of Nutrition and Health, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2014 Mar 6;9(6):e90702. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0090702. eCollection 2014.
Interactions between the diet and intestinal microbiota play a role in health and disease, including obesity and related metabolic complications. There is great interest to use dietary means to manipulate the microbiota to promote health. Currently, the impact of dietary change on the microbiota and the host metabolism is poorly predictable and highly individual. We propose that the responsiveness of the gut microbiota may depend on its composition, and associate with metabolic changes in the host.
Our study involved three independent cohorts of obese adults (n = 78) from Belgium, Finland, and Britain, participating in different dietary interventions aiming to improve metabolic health. We used a phylogenetic microarray for comprehensive fecal microbiota analysis at baseline and after the intervention. Blood cholesterol, insulin and inflammation markers were analyzed as indicators of host response. The data were divided into four training set - test set pairs; each intervention acted both as a part of a training set and as an independent test set. We used linear models to predict the responsiveness of the microbiota and the host, and logistic regression to predict responder vs. non-responder status, or increase vs. decrease of the health parameters.
Our models, based on the abundance of several, mainly Firmicute species at baseline, predicted the responsiveness of the microbiota (AUC = 0.77-1; predicted vs. observed correlation = 0.67-0.88). Many of the predictive taxa showed a non-linear relationship with the responsiveness. The microbiota response associated with the change in serum cholesterol levels with an AUC of 0.96, highlighting the involvement of the intestinal microbiota in metabolic health.
This proof-of-principle study introduces the first potential microbial biomarkers for dietary responsiveness in obese individuals with impaired metabolic health, and reveals the potential of microbiota signatures for personalized nutrition.
饮食与肠道微生物群之间的相互作用在健康和疾病中发挥作用,包括肥胖及相关代谢并发症。人们对利用饮食手段调节微生物群以促进健康有着浓厚兴趣。目前,饮食变化对微生物群和宿主代谢的影响难以预测且个体差异很大。我们提出,肠道微生物群的反应性可能取决于其组成,并与宿主的代谢变化相关。
我们的研究涉及来自比利时、芬兰和英国的三组独立肥胖成年人队列(n = 78),他们参与了旨在改善代谢健康的不同饮食干预。我们使用系统发育微阵列对基线和干预后的粪便微生物群进行全面分析。分析血液中的胆固醇、胰岛素和炎症标志物作为宿主反应的指标。数据被分为四个训练集 - 测试集对;每种干预既作为训练集的一部分,又作为独立的测试集。我们使用线性模型预测微生物群和宿主的反应性,并使用逻辑回归预测反应者与非反应者状态,或健康参数的增加与减少。
我们基于基线时几种主要是厚壁菌门物种的丰度建立的模型,预测了微生物群的反应性(曲线下面积 = 0.77 - 1;预测与观察的相关性 = 0.67 - 0.88)。许多预测分类群与反应性呈非线性关系。微生物群反应与血清胆固醇水平变化相关,曲线下面积为0.96,突出了肠道微生物群在代谢健康中的作用。
这项原理验证研究引入了首批针对代谢健康受损的肥胖个体饮食反应性的潜在微生物生物标志物,并揭示了微生物群特征在个性化营养方面的潜力。