A mechanism by which gut microbiota elevates permeability and inflammation in obese/diabetic mice and human gut

SP Mishra, B Wang, S Jain, J Ding, J Rejeski… - Gut, 2023 - gut.bmj.com
SP Mishra, B Wang, S Jain, J Ding, J Rejeski, CM Furdui, DW Kitzman, S Taraphder…
Gut, 2023gut.bmj.com
Objective Ample evidence exists for the role of abnormal gut microbiota composition and
increased gut permeability ('leaky gut') in chronic inflammation that commonly co-occurs in
the gut in both obesity and diabetes, yet the detailed mechanisms involved in this process
have remained elusive. Design In this study, we substantiate the causal role of the gut
microbiota by use of faecal conditioned media along with faecal microbiota transplantation.
Using untargeted and comprehensive approaches, we discovered the mechanism by which …
Objective
Ample evidence exists for the role of abnormal gut microbiota composition and increased gut permeability (‘leaky gut’) in chronic inflammation that commonly co-occurs in the gut in both obesity and diabetes, yet the detailed mechanisms involved in this process have remained elusive.
Design
In this study, we substantiate the causal role of the gut microbiota by use of faecal conditioned media along with faecal microbiota transplantation. Using untargeted and comprehensive approaches, we discovered the mechanism by which the obese microbiota instigates gut permeability, inflammation and abnormalities in glucose metabolism.
Results
We demonstrated that the reduced capacity of the microbiota from both obese mice and humans to metabolise ethanolamine results in ethanolamine accumulation in the gut, accounting for induction of intestinal permeability. Elevated ethanolamine increased the expression of microRNA-miR-101a-3p by enhancing ARID3a binding on the miR promoter. Increased miR-101a-3p decreased the stability of zona occludens-1 (Zo1) mRNA, which in turn, weakened intestinal barriers and induced gut permeability, inflammation and abnormalities in glucose metabolism. Importantly, restoring ethanolamine-metabolising activity in gut microbiota using a novel probiotic therapy reduced elevated gut permeability, inflammation and abnormalities in glucose metabolism by correcting the ARID3a/miR-101a/Zo1 axis.
Conclusion
Overall, we discovered that the reduced capacity of obese microbiota to metabolise ethanolamine instigates gut permeability, inflammation and glucose metabolic dysfunctions, and restoring ethanolamine-metabolising capacity by a novel probiotic therapy reverses these abnormalities.
Trial registration number
NCT02869659 and NCT03269032.
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