4.7 Article

Therapeutic potential of natural products against atherosclerosis: Targeting on gut microbiota

Journal

PHARMACOLOGICAL RESEARCH
Volume 163, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.phrs.2020.105362

Keywords

Gut microbiota; Atherosclerosis; Natural products; TMAO; SCFAs

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFC1704500]
  2. National Program for NSFC [81973624, 81830112, 81803691]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin City [19JCYBJC28200]
  4. Science and Technology Program of Tianjin [20ZYJDJC00070]
  5. National Science and Technology Major Projects for Key New Drug Creation and Manufacturing Program [2019ZX09201005-002-007]

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Gut microbiota plays a crucial role in maintaining human health and affecting pathological outcomes, particularly in metabolic or cardiovascular diseases. Restoring the gut microbiota ecosystem can decrease the incidence of cardiovascular diseases such as atherosclerosis.
Gut microbiota (GM) has emerged as an essential and integral factor for maintaining human health and affecting pathological outcomes. Metagenomics and metabolomics characterization have furthered gut metagenome's understanding and unveiled that deviation of specific GM community members and GM-dependent metabolites imbalance orchestrate metabolic or cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). Restoring GM ecosystem with nutraceutical supplements keenly prebiotics and probiotics relatively decreases CVDs incidence and overall mortality. In Atherosclerosis, commensal and pathogenic gut microbes correlate with atherogenesis events. GM-dependent metabolites-trimethylamine N-oxide and short-chain fatty acids regulate atherosclerosis-related metabolic processes in opposite patterns to affect atherosclerosis outcomes. Therefore, GM might be a potential therapeutic target for atherosclerosis. In atherogenic animal models, natural products with cardioprotective properties could modulate the GM ecosystem by revitalizing healthier GM phylotypes and abrogating proatherogenic metabolites, paving future research paths for clinical therapeutics.

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