Molecular phenomics and metagenomics of hepatic steatosis in non-diabetic obese women

Hepatic steatosis is a multifactorial condition that is often observed in obese patients and is a prelude to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Here, we combine shotgun sequencing of fecal metagenomes with molecular phenomics (hepatic transcriptome and plasma and urine metabolomes) in two well-chara...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Nature Medicine 2018-06, Vol.24, p.1070-1080
Hauptverfasser: Hoyles, Lesley, Fernández-Real, José-Manuel, Federici, Massimo, Serino, Matteo, Abbott, James, Charpentier, Julie, Heymes, Christophe, Luque, Jèssica Latorre, Anthony, Elodie, Barton, Richard H, Chilloux, Julien, Myridakis, Antonis, Martinez-Gili, Laura, Moreno-Navarrete, José Maria, Benhamed, Fadila, Azalbert, Vincent, Blasco-Baque, Vincent, Puig, Josep, Xifra, Gemma, Ricart, Wifredo, Tomlinson, Christopher, Woodbridge, Mark, Cardellini, Marina, Davato, Francesca, Cardolini, Iris, Porzio, Ottavia, Gentileschi, Paolo, Lopez, Frédéric, Foufelle, Fabienne, Butcher, Sarah A, Holmes, Elaine, Nicholson, Jeremy K, Postic, Catherine, Burcelin, Rémy, Dumas, Marc-Emmanuel
Format: Magazinearticle
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:Hepatic steatosis is a multifactorial condition that is often observed in obese patients and is a prelude to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Here, we combine shotgun sequencing of fecal metagenomes with molecular phenomics (hepatic transcriptome and plasma and urine metabolomes) in two well-characterized cohorts of morbidly obese women recruited to the FLORINASH study. We reveal molecular networks linking the gut microbiome and the host phenome to hepatic steatosis. Patients with steatosis have low microbial gene richness and increased genetic potential for the processing of dietary lipids and endotoxin biosynthesis (notably from Proteobacteria), hepatic inflammation and dysregulation of aromatic and branched-chain amino acid metabolism. We demonstrated that fecal microbiota transplants and chronic treatment with phenylacetic acid, a microbial product of aromatic amino acid metabolism, successfully trigger steatosis and branched-chain amino acid metabolism. Molecular phenomic signatures were predictive (area under the curve = 87%) and consistent with the gut microbiome having an effect on the steatosis phenome (>75% shared variation) and, therefore, actionable via microbiome-based therapies.
ISSN:1078-8956
1744-7933
DOI:10.1038/s41591-018-0061-3