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Metabolic reprogramming of the intestinal microbiome with functional bile acid changes underlie the development of NAFLD

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Bile acids are hepatic metabolites and have many properties considered to be relevant to the pathophysiology of NAFLD. Circulating levels of the intestinal microbiome‐modified bile acid deoxycholate are increased in cirrhosis. APPROACH AND RESULTS: To further elucidate the role...

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Autores principales: Smirnova, Ekaterina, Muthiah, Mark D., Narayan, Nicole, Siddiqui, Mohamad S., Puri, Puneet, Luketic, Velimir A., Contos, Melissa J., Idowu, Michael, Chuang, Jen‐Chieh, Billin, Andrew N., Huss, Ryan S., Myers, Robert P., Boyett, Sherry, Seneshaw, Mulugeta, Min, Hae‐Ki, Mirshahi, Faridodin, Sanyal, Arun J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9653520/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35561146
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hep.32568
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author Smirnova, Ekaterina
Muthiah, Mark D.
Narayan, Nicole
Siddiqui, Mohamad S.
Puri, Puneet
Luketic, Velimir A.
Contos, Melissa J.
Idowu, Michael
Chuang, Jen‐Chieh
Billin, Andrew N.
Huss, Ryan S.
Myers, Robert P.
Boyett, Sherry
Seneshaw, Mulugeta
Min, Hae‐Ki
Mirshahi, Faridodin
Sanyal, Arun J.
author_facet Smirnova, Ekaterina
Muthiah, Mark D.
Narayan, Nicole
Siddiqui, Mohamad S.
Puri, Puneet
Luketic, Velimir A.
Contos, Melissa J.
Idowu, Michael
Chuang, Jen‐Chieh
Billin, Andrew N.
Huss, Ryan S.
Myers, Robert P.
Boyett, Sherry
Seneshaw, Mulugeta
Min, Hae‐Ki
Mirshahi, Faridodin
Sanyal, Arun J.
author_sort Smirnova, Ekaterina
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Bile acids are hepatic metabolites and have many properties considered to be relevant to the pathophysiology of NAFLD. Circulating levels of the intestinal microbiome‐modified bile acid deoxycholate are increased in cirrhosis. APPROACH AND RESULTS: To further elucidate the role of bile acids and intestinal microbiota linked to bile acids in progressively severe NAFLD, a multiomic study of feces including 16S rRNA sequencing, microbial transcriptomics and metabolomics was performed in a cohort with varying phenotypes of NAFLD. Several bile acids of microbial origin derived from deoxycholic acid (DCA) (glycodeoxycholate, 7‐ketodeoxycholic acid, dehydrocholic acid) increased with disease activity and fibrosis stage. These were linked to increased expression of microbial bile salt hydrolase, bile acid operon (BaiCD) and hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (hdhA) required for DCA and downstream metabolite synthesis providing a mechanistic basis for altered bile acid profiles with disease progression. Bacteroidetes and several genera of Lachnospiraceae family containing DCA generating genes increased with increasing disease severity, whereas several potentially beneficial microbes sensitive to antibacterial effects of DCA e.g., Ruminococcaceae were decreased. The clinical relevance of these data was confirmed in an independent cohort enrolled in a clinical trial for NASH where at entry DCA and its conjugates were associated with advanced fibrosis. In patients treated with placebo, DCA declined in those with fibrosis regression and increased in those with fibrosis progression. DCA rose further in those with compensated cirrhosis when they experienced decompensation. CONCLUSIONS: These findings demonstrate a role for bile acids and the bile acid dependent microbiome in the development and progression of NAFLD and set the stage to leverage these findings for NASH biomarker development and for therapeutics.
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spelling pubmed-96535202022-12-01 Metabolic reprogramming of the intestinal microbiome with functional bile acid changes underlie the development of NAFLD Smirnova, Ekaterina Muthiah, Mark D. Narayan, Nicole Siddiqui, Mohamad S. Puri, Puneet Luketic, Velimir A. Contos, Melissa J. Idowu, Michael Chuang, Jen‐Chieh Billin, Andrew N. Huss, Ryan S. Myers, Robert P. Boyett, Sherry Seneshaw, Mulugeta Min, Hae‐Ki Mirshahi, Faridodin Sanyal, Arun J. Hepatology Original Articles BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Bile acids are hepatic metabolites and have many properties considered to be relevant to the pathophysiology of NAFLD. Circulating levels of the intestinal microbiome‐modified bile acid deoxycholate are increased in cirrhosis. APPROACH AND RESULTS: To further elucidate the role of bile acids and intestinal microbiota linked to bile acids in progressively severe NAFLD, a multiomic study of feces including 16S rRNA sequencing, microbial transcriptomics and metabolomics was performed in a cohort with varying phenotypes of NAFLD. Several bile acids of microbial origin derived from deoxycholic acid (DCA) (glycodeoxycholate, 7‐ketodeoxycholic acid, dehydrocholic acid) increased with disease activity and fibrosis stage. These were linked to increased expression of microbial bile salt hydrolase, bile acid operon (BaiCD) and hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (hdhA) required for DCA and downstream metabolite synthesis providing a mechanistic basis for altered bile acid profiles with disease progression. Bacteroidetes and several genera of Lachnospiraceae family containing DCA generating genes increased with increasing disease severity, whereas several potentially beneficial microbes sensitive to antibacterial effects of DCA e.g., Ruminococcaceae were decreased. The clinical relevance of these data was confirmed in an independent cohort enrolled in a clinical trial for NASH where at entry DCA and its conjugates were associated with advanced fibrosis. In patients treated with placebo, DCA declined in those with fibrosis regression and increased in those with fibrosis progression. DCA rose further in those with compensated cirrhosis when they experienced decompensation. CONCLUSIONS: These findings demonstrate a role for bile acids and the bile acid dependent microbiome in the development and progression of NAFLD and set the stage to leverage these findings for NASH biomarker development and for therapeutics. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022-06-23 2022-12 /pmc/articles/PMC9653520/ /pubmed/35561146 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hep.32568 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Hepatology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Smirnova, Ekaterina
Muthiah, Mark D.
Narayan, Nicole
Siddiqui, Mohamad S.
Puri, Puneet
Luketic, Velimir A.
Contos, Melissa J.
Idowu, Michael
Chuang, Jen‐Chieh
Billin, Andrew N.
Huss, Ryan S.
Myers, Robert P.
Boyett, Sherry
Seneshaw, Mulugeta
Min, Hae‐Ki
Mirshahi, Faridodin
Sanyal, Arun J.
Metabolic reprogramming of the intestinal microbiome with functional bile acid changes underlie the development of NAFLD
title Metabolic reprogramming of the intestinal microbiome with functional bile acid changes underlie the development of NAFLD
title_full Metabolic reprogramming of the intestinal microbiome with functional bile acid changes underlie the development of NAFLD
title_fullStr Metabolic reprogramming of the intestinal microbiome with functional bile acid changes underlie the development of NAFLD
title_full_unstemmed Metabolic reprogramming of the intestinal microbiome with functional bile acid changes underlie the development of NAFLD
title_short Metabolic reprogramming of the intestinal microbiome with functional bile acid changes underlie the development of NAFLD
title_sort metabolic reprogramming of the intestinal microbiome with functional bile acid changes underlie the development of nafld
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9653520/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35561146
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hep.32568
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