4.5 Article

Gut dysbiosis is associated with the reduced exercise capacity of elderly patients with hypertension

期刊

HYPERTENSION RESEARCH
卷 41, 期 12, 页码 1036-1044

出版社

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41440-018-0110-9

关键词

Gut microbiome; Exercise capacity; 16 s rRNA; Elderly patient; Hypertension

资金

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31670701]
  2. Health Bureau of Zhejiang Province [2018KY852, 2018KY194]
  3. Chinese Traditional Medicine Science and Technology Projects of Zhejiang Province [2018ZB004]

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Hypertension is a global health issue, and a reduced exercise capacity is unavoidable for older people. According to recent clinical studies, the intestinal microbiota play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of many human diseases. We investigated whether specific alterations in the gut microbiota contribute to the reduced exercise capacity of elderly patients with hypertension. This study enrolled 56 subjects, and all patients performed a cardiopulmonary exercise test and underwent fecal bacteria sequencing (16 s ribosomal RNA V4 region). According to peak oxygen uptake values, patients were divided into three groups (Weber A = 19, Weber B = 20, and Weber C = 17). The alpha diversity was not significantly different among the three groups. Regarding the beta diversity, Weber A samples were separate from the other two groups in the nonmetric multidimensional scaling ordination plot (ANOSIM pairwise comparisons generated an R> 0.5; p < 0.05). The abundance of Betaproteobacteria, Burkholderiales, Alcaligenaceae, Faecalibacterium and Ruminococcaceae was diminished in subjects with a reduced exercise capacity (LDA score > 4.0). Escherichia coli are a primary producer of trimethylamine and inflammation in the human gut, and the abundance of this bacteria was increased in patients with a reduced exercise capacity (LDA score > 4.0). On the other hand, Lachnospiraceae-Eubacterium_hallii_group, Lachnospiraceae-Lachnoc/ostridium, Lachnospiraceae-Blautia-Ruminococcus_sp 5_1_39BFAA, and Ruminococcaceae-Faecalibacterium belong to the order Clostridiales that are likely to produce short-chain fatty acids (LDA score > 4.0), and some of these species were enriched in the Weber B or Weber C group in multiple comparisons. Our data pointed to an altered gut microbiota as a potential contributor to the pathogenesis and progression of the reduced exercise capacity of elderly patients with hypertension.

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