Microbiome and Host Health Programme, South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute, Adelaide, Australia.
SAHMRI Microbiome Research Laboratory, School of Medicine, College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders University, Bedford Park, Australia.
Elife. 2020 Oct 19;9:e58407. doi: 10.7554/eLife.58407.
Poor diet and lifestyle exposures are implicated in substantial global increases in non-communicable disease burden in low-income, remote, and Indigenous communities. This observational study investigated the contribution of the fecal microbiome to influence host physiology in two Indigenous communities in the Torres Strait Islands: Mer, a remote island where a traditional diet predominates, and Waiben a more accessible island with greater access to takeaway food and alcohol. Counterintuitively, disease markers were more pronounced in Mer residents. However, island-specific differences in disease risk were explained, in part, by microbiome traits. The absence of , for example, significantly (p=0.014) moderated island-specific patterns of systolic blood pressure in multivariate-adjusted models. We also report mediatory relationships between traits of the fecal metagenome, disease markers, and risk exposures. Understanding how intestinal microbiome traits influence response to disease risk exposures is critical for the development of strategies that mitigate the growing burden of cardiometabolic disease in these communities.
不良饮食和生活方式暴露与全球低收入、偏远和土著社区非传染性疾病负担的大幅增加有关。本观察性研究调查了粪便微生物组对 Torres Strait 群岛中两个土著社区(Mer,一个以传统饮食为主的偏远岛屿和 Waiben,一个更容易获得外卖食品和酒精的岛屿)宿主生理学的影响。出人意料的是,Mer 居民的疾病标志物更为明显。然而,通过微生物组特征可以部分解释岛屿之间疾病风险的差异。例如, 的缺乏显著(p=0.014)调节了多变量调整模型中岛屿特异性收缩压模式。我们还报告了粪便宏基因组特征、疾病标志物和风险暴露之间的中介关系。了解肠道微生物组特征如何影响对疾病风险暴露的反应对于制定减轻这些社区不断增加的心血管代谢疾病负担的策略至关重要。