Denou Emmanuel, Marcinko Katarina, Surette Michael G, Steinberg Gregory R, Schertzer Jonathan D
Department of Biochemistry and Biomedical Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada;
Department of Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; and.
Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2016 Jun 1;310(11):E982-93. doi: 10.1152/ajpendo.00537.2015. Epub 2016 Apr 26.
Diet and exercise underpin the risk of obesity-related metabolic disease. Diet alters the gut microbiota, which contributes to aspects of metabolic disease during obesity. Repeated exercise provides metabolic benefits during obesity. We assessed whether exercise could oppose changes in the taxonomic and predicted metagenomic characteristics of the gut microbiota during diet-induced obesity. We hypothesized that high-intensity interval training (HIIT) would counteract high-fat diet (HFD)-induced changes in the microbiota without altering obesity in mice. Compared with chow-fed mice, an obesity-causing HFD decreased the Bacteroidetes-to-Firmicutes ratio and decreased the genetic capacity in the fecal microbiota for metabolic pathways such as the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. After HFD-induced obesity was established, a subset of mice were HIIT for 6 wk, which increased host aerobic capacity but did not alter body or adipose tissue mass. The effects of exercise training on the microbiota were gut segment dependent and more extensive in the distal gut. HIIT increased the alpha diversity and Bacteroidetes/Firmicutes ratio of the distal gut and fecal microbiota during diet-induced obesity. Exercise training increased the predicted genetic capacity related to the TCA cycle among other aspects of metabolism. Strikingly, the same microbial metabolism indexes that were increased by exercise were all decreased in HFD-fed vs. chow diet-fed mice. Therefore, exercise training directly opposed some of the obesity-related changes in gut microbiota, including lower metagenomic indexes of metabolism. Some host and microbial pathways appeared similarly affected by exercise. These exercise- and diet-induced microbiota interactions can be captured in feces.
饮食和运动是肥胖相关代谢疾病风险的基础。饮食会改变肠道微生物群,这在肥胖期间会导致代谢疾病的某些方面。反复运动在肥胖期间具有代谢益处。我们评估了运动是否能对抗饮食诱导肥胖期间肠道微生物群的分类学和预测宏基因组特征的变化。我们假设高强度间歇训练(HIIT)将抵消高脂饮食(HFD)诱导的微生物群变化,而不会改变小鼠的肥胖状况。与正常饮食喂养的小鼠相比,导致肥胖的高脂饮食降低了拟杆菌门与厚壁菌门的比例,并降低了粪便微生物群中三羧酸(TCA)循环等代谢途径的遗传能力。在高脂饮食诱导的肥胖建立后,一部分小鼠进行了6周的高强度间歇训练,这增加了宿主的有氧能力,但没有改变体重或脂肪组织质量。运动训练对微生物群的影响取决于肠道节段,在远端肠道更为广泛。在饮食诱导肥胖期间,高强度间歇训练增加了远端肠道和粪便微生物群的α多样性以及拟杆菌门/厚壁菌门的比例。运动训练增加了与三羧酸循环相关的预测遗传能力以及代谢的其他方面。引人注目的是,运动增加的相同微生物代谢指标在高脂饮食喂养的小鼠与正常饮食喂养的小鼠中均降低。因此,运动训练直接对抗了肠道微生物群中一些与肥胖相关的变化,包括较低的宏基因组代谢指标。一些宿主和微生物途径似乎受到运动的类似影响。这些运动和饮食诱导的微生物群相互作用可以在粪便中体现出来。