4.8 Article

Temporal relationship among adiposity, gut microbiota, and insulin resistance in a longitudinal human cohort

Journal

BMC MEDICINE
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12916-022-02376-3

Keywords

Adiposity; Gut microbiota; Insulin resistance; Longitudinal cohort study; Obesity; Temporal relationship; Weight change

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [82073529, 81903316, 81773416, 82103826]
  2. Zhejiang Ten-thousand Talents Program [2019R52039]
  3. 5010 Program for Clinical Research of the Sun Yat-sen University (Guangzhou, China) [2007032]

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This study revealed the temporal relationship between adiposity and gut microbiota and identified Lachnospiraceae bacterium 3 1 57FAA CT1 as a potential mediator of the effect of adiposity on insulin resistance. The findings are helpful for the discovery of novel therapeutic targets.
Background: The temporal relationship between adiposity and gut microbiota was unexplored. Whether some gut microbes lie in the pathways from adiposity to insulin resistance is less clear. Our study aims to reveal the temporal relationship between adiposity and gut microbiota and investigate whether gut microbiota may mediate the association of adiposity with insulin resistance in a longitudinal human cohort study. Methods: We obtained repeated-measured gut shotgun metagenomic and anthropometric data from 426 Chinese participants over similar to 3 years of follow-up. Cross-lagged path analysis was used to examine the temporal relationship between BMI and gut microbial features. The associations between the gut microbes and insulin resistance-related phenotypes were examined using a linear mixed-effect model. We examined the mediation effect of gut microbes on the association between adiposity and insulin resistance-related phenotypes. Replication was performed in the HMP cohort. Results: Baseline BMI was prospectively associated with levels of ten gut microbial species. Among them, results of four species (Adlercreutzia equolifaciens, Parabacteroides unclassified, Lachnospiraceae bacterium 3 1 57FAA CT1, Lachnospiraceae bacterium 7 7 58FAA) were replicated in the independent HMP cohort. Lachnospiraceae bacterium 3 1 57FAA CT1 was inversely associated with HOMA-IR and fasting insulin. Lachnospiraceae bacterium 3 7 57FAA CT1 mediated the association of overweight/obesity with HOMA-IR (FDR<0.05). Furthermore, Lachnospiraceae bacterium 3 1 57FAA CT1 was positively associated with the butyrate-producing pathway PWY-5022 (p < 0.001). Conclusions: Our study identified one potentially beneficial microbe Lachnospiraceae bacterium 3 1 57FAA CT1, which might mediate the effect of adiposity on insulin resistance. The identified microbes are helpful for the discovery of novel therapeutic targets, as to mitigate the impact of adiposity on insulin resistance.

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