Koo Seok Hwee, Chu Collins Wenhan, Khoo Joan Joo Ching, Cheong Magdalin, Soon Gaik Hong, Ho Eliza Xin Pei, Law Ngai Moh, De Sessions Paola Florez, Fock Kwong Ming, Ang Tiing Leong, Lee Edmund Jon Deoon, Hsiang John Chen
Clinical Trials and Research Unit Changi General Hospital Singapore Singapore.
Department of Pharmacology, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine National University of Singapore Singapore Singapore.
JGH Open. 2019 Apr 16;3(6):480-487. doi: 10.1002/jgh3.12184. eCollection 2019 Dec.
Perturbance in the composition of human gut microbiota has been associated with metabolic disorders such as obesity, diabetes mellitus, and insulin resistance. The objectives of this study are to examine the effects of ethnicity, central obesity, and recorded dietary components on potentially influencing the human gut microbiome. We hypothesize that these factors have an influence on the composition of the gut microbiome.
Subjects of Chinese ( = 14), Malay ( = 10), and Indian ( = 11) ancestry, with a median age of 39 years (range: 22-70 years old), provided stool samples for gut microbiome profiling using 16S rRNA sequencing and completed a dietary questionnaire. The serum samples were assayed for a panel of biomarkers (interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor alpha, adiponectin, cleaved cytokeratin 18, lipopolysaccharide-binding protein, and limulus amebocyte lysate). Central obesity was defined by waist circumference cut-off values for Asians.
There were no significant differences in Shannon alpha diversity for ethnicity and central obesity and no associations between levels of inflammatory cytokines and obesity. The relative abundances of ( = 0.02), ( = 0.02), ( = 0.03), and ( = 0.04) were significantly lower in the obese group. From principle coordinate analysis, the effects of the intake of fiber and fat/saturated fat were in contrast with each other, with clustering of obese individuals leaning toward fiber.
The study demonstrated that there were differences in the gut microbiome in obese individuals. Certain bacterial taxa were present in lower abundance in the group with central obesity. Fiber and fat/saturated fat diets were not the key determinants of central obesity.
人类肠道微生物群组成的扰动与肥胖、糖尿病和胰岛素抵抗等代谢紊乱有关。本研究的目的是检验种族、中心性肥胖和记录的饮食成分对潜在影响人类肠道微生物组的作用。我们假设这些因素会影响肠道微生物组的组成。
招募了华裔(n = 14)、马来裔(n = 10)和印度裔(n = 11)受试者,中位年龄为39岁(范围:22 - 70岁),提供粪便样本用于16S rRNA测序以分析肠道微生物组,并完成一份饮食问卷。检测血清样本中的一组生物标志物(白细胞介素 - 6、肿瘤坏死因子α、脂联素、裂解的细胞角蛋白18、脂多糖结合蛋白和鲎试剂)。根据亚洲人的腰围临界值定义中心性肥胖。
种族和中心性肥胖的香农α多样性无显著差异,炎症细胞因子水平与肥胖之间也无关联。肥胖组中Akkermansia(p = 0.02)、Bifidobacterium(p = 0.02)、Dialister(p = 0.03)和Ruminococcus(p = 0.04)的相对丰度显著较低。主坐标分析显示,纤维和脂肪/饱和脂肪摄入的影响相互矛盾,肥胖个体倾向于纤维聚集。
该研究表明肥胖个体的肠道微生物组存在差异。中心性肥胖组中某些细菌类群的丰度较低。纤维和脂肪/饱和脂肪饮食不是中心性肥胖的关键决定因素。