High-fat diet impact on intestinal cholesterol conversion by the microbiota and serum cholesterol levels

Cholesterol-to-coprostanol conversion by the intestinal microbiota has been suggested to reduce intestinal and serum cholesterol availability, but the relationship between intestinal cholesterol conversion and the gut microbiota, dietary habits, and serum lipids has not been characterized in detail....

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Veröffentlicht in:iScience 2023-09, Vol.26 (9), p.107697-107697, Article 107697
Hauptverfasser: Bubeck, Alena M., Urbain, Paul, Horn, Cathrine, Jung, Anna S., Ferrari, Lisa, Ruple, Hannah K., Podlesny, Daniel, Zorn, Stefanie, Laupsa-Borge, Johnny, Jensen, Caroline, Lindseth, Inge, Lied, Gülen Arslan, Dierkes, Jutta, Mellgren, Gunnar, Bertz, Hartmut, Matysik, Silke, Krautbauer, Sabrina, Liebisch, Gerhard, Schoett, Hans-Frieder, Dankel, Simon N., Fricke, W. Florian
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cholesterol-to-coprostanol conversion by the intestinal microbiota has been suggested to reduce intestinal and serum cholesterol availability, but the relationship between intestinal cholesterol conversion and the gut microbiota, dietary habits, and serum lipids has not been characterized in detail. We measured conserved proportions of cholesterol high and low-converter types in individuals with and without obesity from two distinct, independent low-carbohydrate high-fat (LCHF) dietary intervention studies. Across both cohorts, cholesterol conversion increased in previous low-converters after LCHF diet and was positively correlated with the fecal relative abundance of Eubacterium coprostanoligenes. Lean cholesterol high-converters had increased serum triacylglycerides and decreased HDL-C levels before LCHF diet and responded to the intervention with increased LDL-C, independently of fat, cholesterol, and saturated fatty acid intake. Our findings identify the cholesterol high-converter type as a microbiome marker, which in metabolically healthy lean individuals is associated with increased LDL-C in response to LCHF. [Display omitted] •Equal fractions of cholesterol high/low-converters in humans with or without obesity•Increased E. coprostanol. in high-converters but no reduction in serum cholesterol•Diet increased conversion in low-converters without altering serum cholesterol•Increased TAG before and LDL-C after low-carb high-fat diet in lean high-converters Health sciences; Human metabolism; Microbiology; Genomics
ISSN:2589-0042
2589-0042
DOI:10.1016/j.isci.2023.107697