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The impact of gut microbiota metabolites on cellular bioenergetics and cardiometabolic health

Journal

NUTRITION & METABOLISM
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12986-021-00598-5

Keywords

H2S; SCFAs; Nitrate; Nitric oxide; TMAO; Mitochondria; Metabolic syndrome

Funding

  1. Medical University of Warsaw
  2. Slovak Research and Development Agency [APVV-19-0154]
  3. VEGA Grant Agency of the Slovak Republic [VEGA-2/0079/19]

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Recent research has shown a reciprocal relationship between gut microbiota-derived metabolites and the host in regulating energy homeostasis in mammals. These metabolites play a significant role in physiological and pathological processes controlling energy and vascular homeostasis, and modulation of these products could potentially be a new approach for treating obesity, hypertension, and type 2 diabetes.
Recent research demonstrates a reciprocal relationship between gut microbiota-derived metabolites and the host in controlling the energy homeostasis in mammals. On the one hand, to thrive, gut bacteria exploit nutrients digested by the host. On the other hand, the host utilizes numerous products of gut bacteria metabolism as a substrate for ATP production in the colon. Finally, bacterial metabolites seep from the gut into the bloodstream and interfere with the host's cellular bioenergetics machinery. Notably, there is an association between alterations in microbiota composition and the development of metabolic diseases and their cardiovascular complications. Some metabolites, like short-chain fatty acids and trimethylamine, are considered markers of cardiometabolic health. Others, like hydrogen sulfide and nitrite, demonstrate antihypertensive properties. Scientific databases were searched for pre-clinical and clinical studies to summarize current knowledge on the role of gut microbiota metabolites in the regulation of mammalian bioenergetics and discuss their potential involvement in the development of cardiometabolic disorders. Overall, the available data demonstrates that gut bacteria products affect physiological and pathological processes controlling energy and vascular homeostasis. Thus, the modulation of microbiota-derived metabolites may represent a new approach for treating obesity, hypertension and type 2 diabetes.

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