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Microbiome connections with host metabolism and habitual diet from 1,098 deeply phenotyped individuals

Authors :
Gianmarco Piccinno
Chloe Mirzayi
Caroline I. Le Roy
Nicola Segata
Christopher Bonnett
Rachel J. Gibson
Adrian Tett
Francesco Asnicar
Sehyun Oh
Andrew T. Chan
Serge Danzanvilliers
Curtis Huttenhower
Lucy Francis
George Hadjigeorgiou
Francesca Giordano
Mohsen Mazidi
Ana M. Valdes
Joan Capdevila
Jonathan Wolf
Richard Davies
Leonard Dubois
Jose M. Ordovas
Olatz Mompeo
Ludwig Geistlinger
Asya Khleborodova
Christopher D. Gardner
Levi Waldron
Rachel Hine
Sarah Berry
Davide Bazzani
Haya Al Khatib
David A. Drew
Francesco Beghini
Long H. Nguyen
Mireia Valles-Colomer
Andrew Maltez Thomas
Tim D. Spector
Paul W. Franks
Emily R Leeming
Source :
Nature Medicine
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

The gut microbiome is shaped by diet and influences host metabolism; however, these links are complex and can be unique to each individual. We performed deep metagenomic sequencing of 1,203 gut microbiomes from 1,098 individuals enrolled in the Personalised Responses to Dietary Composition Trial (PREDICT 1) study, whose detailed long-term diet information, as well as hundreds of fasting and same-meal postprandial cardiometabolic blood marker measurements were available. We found many significant associations between microbes and specific nutrients, foods, food groups and general dietary indices, which were driven especially by the presence and diversity of healthy and plant-based foods. Microbial biomarkers of obesity were reproducible across external publicly available cohorts and in agreement with circulating blood metabolites that are indicators of cardiovascular disease risk. While some microbes, such as Prevotella copri and Blastocystis spp., were indicators of favorable postprandial glucose metabolism, overall microbiome composition was predictive for a large panel of cardiometabolic blood markers including fasting and postprandial glycemic, lipemic and inflammatory indices. The panel of intestinal species associated with healthy dietary habits overlapped with those associated with favorable cardiometabolic and postprandial markers, indicating that our large-scale resource can potentially stratify the gut microbiome into generalizable health levels in individuals without clinically manifest disease.

Details

ISSN :
1546170X and 10788956
Volume :
27
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....13a9d20401e48e386486025c19c5570e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-020-01183-8