4.7 Article

Long Term High Protein Diet Feeding Alters the Microbiome and Increases Intestinal Permeability, Systemic Inflammation and Kidney Injury in Mice

期刊

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mnfr.202000851

关键词

chronic kidney disease; gut microbiota; gut permeability; high protein diets; renal injury

资金

  1. NCRIS-enabled Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC)
  2. National Health andMedical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia [586645]
  3. Australian and New Zealand Society of Nephrology (ANZSN)
  4. NHMRC of Australia [GNT1160428]
  5. Australian Government

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The study found that long-term consumption of a high protein diet in mice can lead to kidney injury, systemic inflammation, increased gastrointestinal permeability, and alterations in the gut microbiome structure.
Scope This study evaluates the effects of a chronic high protein diet (HPD) on kidney injury, intestinal permeability and gut microbiota perturbations in a mouse model. Method and results Mice are fed a diet containing either 20% or 52% energy from protein for 24 weeks; protein displaced an equivalent amount of wheat starch. The HPD does not alter glycemic control or body weight. The HPD induces kidney injury as evidenced by increase in albuminuria, urinary kidney injury molecule-1, blood urea nitrogen, urinary isoprostanes and renal cortical NF-kappa B p65 gene expression. HPD decreases intestinal occludin gene expression, increases plasma endotoxin and plasma monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, indicating intestinal leakiness and systemic inflammation. Cecal microbial analysis reveals that HPD feeding does not alter alpha diversity; however, it does alter beta diversity, indicating an altered microbial community structure with HPD feeding. Predicted metagenome pathway analysis demonstrates a reduction in branched-chain amino acid synthesis and an increase of the urea cycle with consumption of a HPD. Conclusion These results demonstrate that long term HPD consumption in mice causes albuminuria, systemic inflammation, increase in gastrointestinal permeability and is associated with gut microbiome remodeling with an increase in the urea cycle pathway, which may contribute to renal injury.

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