4.3 Article

Association of gut microbiome with fasting triglycerides, fasting insulin and obesity status in Mexican children

Journal

PEDIATRIC OBESITY
Volume 16, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ijpo.12748

Keywords

gut microbiota; insulin; Mexico; paediatric obesity; triglycerides

Categories

Funding

  1. Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social [FIS/IMSS/PROT/PRIO/17/062]

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The gut microbial community structure in children is associated with obesity, fasting plasma insulin (FPI) in Mexico City, and with obesity, FPI, and triglycerides (TG) in Oaxaca.
Background The association of gut microbiota with obesity and its cardio-metabolic complications in paediatric populations is still controversial. Objective We investigated the association of obesity and cardio-metabolic traits with gut microbiota on 167 and 163 children with normal weight and obesity from Mexico City and Oaxaca, Mexico. Methods Anthropometric and biochemical traits were measured. The microbial communities were determined by high-throughput sequencing of bacterial 16S rRNA gene v3-v4 region. Results The gut microbial community structure was associated with obesity and fasting plasma insulin (FPI) in Mexico City (P-Obesity = 0.012, P-FPI = 0.0003) and Oaxaca (P-Obesity = 0.034, P-FPI = 0.016), and with triglycerides (TG) in Oaxaca (P = .0002). The Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio was positively associated with TG in Oaxaca (P = .003). Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes phyla were positively and negatively associated with obesity (Mexico City: P-Firmicutes = 0.013, P-Bacteroidetes = 0.009) and TG (Oaxaca: P-Firmicutes = 0.002, P-Bacteroidetes = 0.004). In Oaxaca, Verrucomicrobia was negatively associated with obesity (P = .004). In Mexico City, the bacterial genus Fusicatenibacter, Romboutsia, Ruminococcaceae, Ruminiclostridium, Blautia, Clostridium, Anaerostipes and Intestinibacter were associated with obesity and FPI, while in Oaxaca, Bacteroides, Alistipes and Clostridium were associated with TG. Conclusion The gut microbial community structure in children is associated with obesity and FPI in Mexico City, and with obesity, FPI and TG in Oaxaca.

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