4.7 Article

Menopause Is Associated with an Altered Gut Microbiome and Estrobolome, with Implications for Adverse Cardiometabolic Risk in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos

Journal

MSYSTEMS
Volume 7, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/msystems.00273-22

Keywords

gut microbiome; menopause

Categories

Funding

  1. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) [HHSN268201300001I/N01-HC-65233]
  2. University of Miami [HHSN268201300004I/N01-HC-65234]
  3. Albert Einstein College of Medicine [HHSN268201300002I/N01-HC-65235]
  4. University of Illinois at Chicago [HHSN268201300003I/N01-HC-65236]
  5. San Diego State University [HHSN268201300005I/N01-HC-65237]
  6. NHLBI: National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities
  7. National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders
  8. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research
  9. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
  10. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
  11. NIH Institution-Office of Dietary Supplements
  12. National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities [R01MD011389-01]
  13. Life Course Methodology Core (LCMC) at Albert Einstein College of Medicine
  14. New York Regional Center for Diabetes Translation Research [P30 DK111022-8786, P30 DK111022]

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This study explores the relationship between menopause and the gut microbiome in a large Hispanic/Latino population. The findings suggest that postmenopausal women's gut microbiome becomes more similar to that of men, potentially due to the common condition of low estrogen/progesterone levels. Menopause also leads to specific changes in the gut microbiome, including a decrease in certain gut pathogens and a decrease in hormone-related metabolic potential. These changes in the gut microbiome are associated with adverse cardiometabolic risk in postmenopausal women.
Menopause is a pivotal period during which loss of ovarian hormones increases cardiometabolic risk and may also influence the gut microbiome. However, the menopause-microbiome relationship has not been examined in a large study, and its implications for cardiometabolic disease are unknown. In the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos, a population with high burden of cardiometabolic risk factors, shotgun metagenomic sequencing was performed on stool from 2,300 participants (295 premenopausal women, 1,027 postmenopausal women, and 978 men), and serum metabolomics was available on a subset. Postmenopausal women trended toward lower gut microbiome diversity and altered overall composition compared to premenopausal women, while differing less from men, in models adjusted for age and other demographic/behavioral covariates. Differentially abundant taxa for post- versus premenopausal women included Bacteroides sp. strain Ga6A1, Prevotella marshii, and Sutterella wadsworthensis (enriched in postmenopause) and Escherichia coli-Shigella spp., Oscillibacter sp. strain KLE1745, Akkermansia muciniphila, Clostridium lactatifermentans, Parabacteroides johnsonii, and Veillonella seminalis (depleted in postmenopause); these taxa similarly differed between men and women. Postmenopausal women had higher abundance of the microbial sulfate transport system and decreased abundance of microbial beta-glucuronidase; these functions correlated with serum progestin metabolites, suggesting involvement of postmenopausal gut microbes in sex hormone retention. In postmenopausal women, menopause-related microbiome alterations were associated with adverse cardiometabolic profiles. In summary, in a large U.S. Hispanic/Latino population, menopause is associated with a gut microbiome more similar to that of men, perhaps related to the common condition of a low estrogen/progesterone state. Future work should examine similarity of results in other racial/ethnic groups. IMPORTANCE The menopausal transition, marked by declining ovarian hormones, is recognized as a pivotal period of cardiometabolic risk. Gut microbiota metabolically interact with sex hormones, but large population studies associating menopause with the gut microbiome are lacking. Our results from a large study of Hispanic/Latino women and men suggest that the postmenopausal gut microbiome in women is slightly more similar to the gut microbiome in men and that menopause depletes specific gut pathogens and decreases the hormone-related metabolic potential of the gut microbiome. At the same time, gut microbes may participate in sex hormone reactivation and retention in postmenopausal women. Menopause-related gut microbiome changes were associated with adverse cardiometabolic risk in postmenopausal women, indicating that the gut microbiome contributes to changes in cardiometabolic health during menopause.

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