4.8 Article

Gut microbiota steroid sexual dimorphism and its impact on gonadal steroids: influences of obesity and menopausal status

Journal

MICROBIOME
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40168-020-00913-x

Keywords

Sex; Gender; Gonadal steroids; Testosterone; Progesterone; Microbiome; Sexual dimorphism

Categories

Funding

  1. Instituto de Salud Carlos III from Spain [PI15/01934]
  2. Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [SAF2015-65878-R, AEISAF2017-84060-R]
  3. Generalitat Valenciana, Spain [Prometeo/2018/A/133]
  4. European Commission (FP7, NeuroPain) [2013-602891, H2020-SC1-2019-2-RTD-848099]
  5. Catalan Government (AGAUR) [SGR2017-669]
  6. Spanish Instituto de Salud Carlos III (RTA) [RD16/0017/0020]
  7. Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER) through the Programa Interreg V-A Espana-Francia-Andorra (POCTEFA 2014-2020)
  8. European Regional Development Fund [01.2.2-LMT-K-718-020014]
  9. Research Council of Lithuania (LMTLT)
  10. (European Social Fund Investing in your future) from the Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Spain [CM19/00190]
  11. Miguel Servet Program from the Instituto de Salud Carlos III [ISCIII CP18/00009]
  12. European Social Fund Investing in your future

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Background: Gonadal steroid hormones have been suggested as the underlying mechanism responsible for the sexual dimorphism observed in metabolic diseases. Animal studies have also evidenced a causal role of the gut microbiome and metabolic health. However, the role of sexual dimorphism in the gut microbiota and the potential role of the microbiome in influencing sex steroid hormones and shaping sexually dimorphic susceptibility to disease have been largely overlooked. Although there is some evidence of sex-specific differences in the gut microbiota diversity, composition, and functionality, the results are inconsistent. Importantly, most of these studies have not taken into account the gonadal steroid status. Therefore, we investigated the gut microbiome composition and functionality in relation to sex, menopausal status, and circulating sex steroids. Results: No significant differences were found in alpha diversity indices among pre- and post-menopausal women and men, but beta diversity differed among groups. The gut microbiota from post-menopausal women was more similar to men than to pre-menopausal women. Metagenome functional analyses revealed no significant differences between post-menopausal women and men. Gonadal steroids were specifically associated with these differences. Hence, the gut microbiota of pre-menopausal women was more enriched in genes from the steroid biosynthesis and degradation pathways, with the former having the strongest fold change among all associated pathways. Microbial steroid pathways also had significant associations with the plasma levels of testosterone and progesterone. In addition, a specific microbiome signature was able to predict the circulating testosterone levels at baseline and after 1-year follow-up. In addition, this microbiome signature could be transmitted from humans to antibiotic-induced microbiome-depleted male mice, being able to predict donor's testosterone levels 4 weeks later, implying that the microbiota profile of the recipient mouse was influenced by the donor's gender. Finally, obesity eliminated most of the differences observed among non-obese pre-menopausal women, post-menopausal women, and men in the gut microbiota composition (Bray-Curtis and weighted unifrac beta diversity), functionality, and the gonadal steroid status. Conclusions The present findings evidence clear differences in the gut microbial composition and functionality between men and women, which is eliminated by both menopausal and obesity status. We also reveal a tight link between the gut microbiota composition and the circulating levels of gonadal steroids, particularly testosterone.

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