scholarly journals Molecular Nutrition & Food Research ‐ Functional Relevance of Dietetics and Its Impact on Gut Microbiome, Inflammation and Obesity

2022 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 2270003
Author(s):  
Christine Mayer ◽  
Julia Reuter
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin Shang ◽  
Zhigang Ren ◽  
Ang Li ◽  
Ruixue Guo ◽  
Yiding Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Diabetic nephropathy is characterized by increased incidence, deficient diagnostic methods and poor prognosis. New idea about altered gut microbiome associated with diagnosis and development of diabetic nephropathy remains to be verified. The major aim of our study is to relate fecal microbiome to clinically diagnosed diabetic kidney disease (DKD) or pathologically identified diabetic nephropathy (defined as DN) and further evaluate diagnosis potential of microbial markers for DKD/DN. We carried out 16S rRNA sequencing on a discovery cohort consisting of 352 patients (DKD = 120, DM = diabetes mellitus = 92, Con = healthy controls = 140) to identify microbial taxa and construct DKD classifier. Functional relevance and clinic correlation of microbiome changes were performed using PICRUSt and Spearman analysis, respectively. Independent 60 DKDs and 116 non-DKDs (DM = 46, Con = 70) were used to validate the results. The same analysis was performed on DKD pathologic subtypes (DN = 22, MN = membranous nephropathy = 22). Results DKD/DM samples had a distinct microbiome signature with lower alpha-diversity and significantly different microbial composition compared with Con (P < 0.001). Expansion of opportunistic pathogens (Peptostreptococcaceae_incertae_sedis, Clostridium_sensu_stricto_1, Streptococcus, Enterococcus, Erysipelotrichaceae_incertae_sedis), sulphate-reducing bacteria (Desulfovibrio) and depletion of bacteria producing short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) (Bacteroides, Faecalibacterium, Blautia and Roseburia) were major contributors to above differences. Interestingly, mucosa-associated bacteria including Akkermansia and Ruminococcus were also increased in DKD. The combination of 11 microbial markers could separate 120 DKDs from 232 non-DKDs with an area under curve (AUC) of 88.12%. Correspondingly, diagnostic power of microbial biomarkers was evaluated in a validation cohort of 60 patients and 116 non-DKDs (AUC = 79.75%). Besides DKD-related lipid and arginine metabolism, we also observed an increase of metabolism of aromatic amino acid in DM. Additionally, microbial comparison was carried out between pathologic subtypes of DKD, which could be used to distinguish DN from MN with 77.69% AUC. Conclusion Gut microbiome-related changes were associated with pathogenesis of DKD/DN; Microbiota-targeted markers could be an alternative test for DKD diagnosis and a non-invasive choice to differentiate DKD pathologic subtypes.


Author(s):  
Sunmin Park ◽  
Sunna Kang ◽  
Da Sol Kim

Abstract. Folate and vitamin B12(V-B12) deficiencies are associated with metabolic diseases that may impair memory function. We hypothesized that folate and V-B12 may differently alter mild cognitive impairment, glucose metabolism, and inflammation by modulating the gut microbiome in rats with Alzheimer’s disease (AD)-like dementia. The hypothesis was examined in hippocampal amyloid-β infused rats, and its mechanism was explored. Rats that received an amyloid-β(25–35) infusion into the CA1 region of the hippocampus were fed either control(2.5 mg folate plus 25 μg V-B12/kg diet; AD-CON, n = 10), no folate(0 folate plus 25 μg V-B12/kg diet; AD-FA, n = 10), no V-B12(2.5 mg folate plus 0 μg V-B12/kg diet; AD-V-B12, n = 10), or no folate plus no V-B12(0 mg folate plus 0 μg V-B12/kg diet; AD-FAB12, n = 10) in high-fat diets for 8 weeks. AD-FA and AD-VB12 exacerbated bone mineral loss in the lumbar spine and femur whereas AD-FA lowered lean body mass in the hip compared to AD-CON(P < 0.05). Only AD-FAB12 exacerbated memory impairment by 1.3 and 1.4 folds, respectively, as measured by passive avoidance and water maze tests, compared to AD-CON(P < 0.01). Hippocampal insulin signaling and neuroinflammation were attenuated in AD-CON compared to Non-AD-CON. AD-FAB12 impaired the signaling (pAkt→pGSK-3β) and serum TNF-α and IL-1β levels the most among all groups. AD-CON decreased glucose tolerance by increasing insulin resistance compared to Non-AD-CON. AD-VB12 and AD-FAB12 increased insulin resistance by 1.2 and 1.3 folds, respectively, compared to the AD-CON. AD-CON and Non-AD-CON had a separate communities of gut microbiota. The relative counts of Bacteroidia were lower and those of Clostridia were higher in AD-CON than Non-AD-CON. AD-FA, but not V-B12, separated the gut microbiome community compared to AD-CON and AD-VB12(P = 0.009). In conclusion, folate and B-12 deficiencies impaired memory function by impairing hippocampal insulin signaling and gut microbiota in AD rats.


2012 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 262-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthias Johannes Müller ◽  
Suzan Kamcili-Kubach ◽  
Songül Strassheim ◽  
Eckhardt Koch

A 10-item instrument for the assessment of probable migration-related stressors was developed based on previous work (MIGSTR10) and interrater reliability was tested in a chart review study. The MIGSTR10 and nine nonspecific stressors of the DSM-IV Axis IV (DSMSTR9) were put into a questionnaire format with categorical and dimensional response options. Charts of 100 inpatients (50 Turkish migrants [MIG], 50 native German patients [CON]) with affective or anxiety disorder were reviewed by three independent raters and MIGSTR10, DSMSTR9, and Global Assessment of Functioning scale (GAF) scores were obtained. Interrater reliability indices (ICC) of items and sum scores were calculated. The prevalence of single migration-related stressors in MIG ranged from 15% to 100% (CON 0–92%). All items of the MIGSTR10 (ICC 0.58–0.92) and the DSMSTR9 (ICC 0.56–0.96) reached high to very high interrater agreement (p < .0005). The item analysis of the MIGSTR10 revealed sufficient internal consistency (Cronbach’s α = 0.68/0.69) and only one item (“family conflicts”) without substantial correlation with the remaining scale. Correlation analyses showed a significant overlap of dimensional MIGSTR10 scores (r² = 0.25; p < .01) and DSMSTR9 scores (r² = 9%; p < .05) with GAF scores in MIG indicating functional relevance. MIGSTR10 is considered a feasible, economic, and reliable instrument for the assessment of stressors potentially related to migration.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Krainer ◽  
J Sommer ◽  
D Silbert-Wagner ◽  
S Racedo ◽  
K Panzitt ◽  
...  
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