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Microbial metabolite delta-valerobetaine is a diet-dependent obesogen

Authors :
Ken H. Liu
Joshua A. Owens
Bejan Saeedi
Catherine E. Cohen
Moriah P. Bellissimo
Crystal Naudin
Trevor Darby
Samuel Druzak
Kristal Maner-Smith
Michael Orr
Xin Hu
Jolyn Fernandes
Mary Catherine Camacho
Sarah Hunter-Chang
David VanInsberghe
Chunyu Ma
Thota Ganesh
Samantha M. Yeligar
Karan Uppal
Young-Mi Go
Jessica A. Alvarez
Miriam B. Vos
Thomas R. Ziegler
Michael H. Woodworth
Colleen S. Kraft
Rheinallt M. Jones
Eric Ortlund
Andrew S. Neish
Dean P. Jones
Source :
Nature metabolism. 3(12)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Obesity and obesity-related metabolic disorders are linked to the intestinal microbiome. However, the causality of changes in the microbiome-host interaction affecting energy metabolism remains controversial. Here, we show the microbiome-derived metabolite δ-valerobetaine (VB) is a diet-dependent obesogen that is increased with phenotypic obesity and is correlated with visceral adipose tissue mass in humans. VB is absent in germ-free mice and their mitochondria but present in ex-germ-free conventionalized mice and their mitochondria. Mechanistic studies in vivo and in vitro show VB is produced by diverse bacterial species and inhibits mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation through decreasing cellular carnitine and mitochondrial long-chain acyl-coenzyme As. VB administration to germ-free and conventional mice increases visceral fat mass and exacerbates hepatic steatosis with a western diet but not control diet. Thus, VB provides a molecular target to understand and potentially manage microbiome-host symbiosis or dysbiosis in diet-dependent obesity.

Details

ISSN :
25225812
Volume :
3
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....13641ce5817aff0407c7d1a5ec0ab8e7