Koo Bon Sang, Hwang Eun Ha, Kim Green, Oh Hanseul, Son Yeonghoon, Lee Dongho, Lim Kyung Seob, Kang Philyong, Lee Sangil, Lee Hwal Yong, Jeong Kang Jin, Lee Youngjeon, Baek Seung Ho, Jeon Chang Yeop, Park Sang Je, Kim Young Hyun, Huh Jae Won, Jin Yeung Bae, Kim Sun Uk, Lee Sang Rae, Hong Jung Joo
National Primate Research Center, Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Cheongju 28116, Korea.
Primate Resource Center, Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Cheongju 28116, Korea.
J Vet Sci. 2019 May;20(3):e19. doi: 10.4142/jvs.2019.20.e19.
Microorganisms play important roles in obesity; however, the role of the gut microbiomes in obesity is controversial because of the inconsistent findings. This study investigated the gut microbiome communities in obese and lean groups of captive healthy cynomolgus monkeys reared under strict identical environmental conditions, including their diet. No significant differences in the relative abundance of , and were observed between the obese and lean groups, but a significant difference in ( < 0.05) was noted. Microbial diversity and richness were similar, but highly variable results in microbial composition, diversity, and richness were observed in individuals, irrespective of their state of obesity. Distinct clustering between the groups was not observed by principal coordinate analysis using an unweighted pair group method. Higher sharedness values (95.81% ± 2.28% at the genus level, and 79.54% ± 5.88% at the species level) were identified among individual monkeys. This paper reports the association between the gut microbiome and obesity in captive non-human primate models reared under controlled environments. The relative proportion of and as well as the microbial diversity known to affect obesity were similar in the obese and lean groups of monkeys reared under identical conditions. Therefore, obesity-associated microbial changes reported previously appear to be associated directly with environmental factors, particularly diet, rather than obesity.
微生物在肥胖症中发挥着重要作用;然而,由于研究结果不一致,肠道微生物群在肥胖症中的作用存在争议。本研究调查了在严格相同的环境条件(包括饮食)下饲养的圈养健康食蟹猴肥胖组和瘦组的肠道微生物群落。肥胖组和瘦组之间在 、 和 的相对丰度上未观察到显著差异,但在 方面观察到显著差异( < 0.05)。微生物多样性和丰富度相似,但无论肥胖状态如何,个体中微生物组成、多样性和丰富度的结果高度可变。使用非加权配对组方法的主坐标分析未观察到组间的明显聚类。在个体猴子中发现了较高的共享值(属水平为95.81% ± 2.28%,种水平为79.54% ± 5.88%)。本文报道了在受控环境下饲养的圈养非人类灵长类动物模型中肠道微生物群与肥胖症之间的关联。在相同条件下饲养的肥胖组和瘦组猴子中,已知影响肥胖症的 和 的相对比例以及微生物多样性相似。因此,先前报道的与肥胖相关的微生物变化似乎与环境因素,特别是饮食,而不是肥胖症直接相关。