The intestinal microbiome associated with lipid metabolism and obesity in humans and animals

Author:

Jian Zonghui1ORCID,Zeng Li23,Xu Taojie1,Sun Shuai1,Yan Shixiong1,Zhao Sumei1,Su Zhengchang4,Ge Changrong1,Zhang Yunmei5,Jia Junjing1,Dou Tengfei1

Affiliation:

1. Yunnan Provincial Key Laboratory of Animal Nutrition and Feed Yunnan Agricultural University Kunming People's Republic of China

2. The Chenggong Department Kunming Medical University Affiliated Stomatological Hospital Kunming People's Republic of China

3. Yunnan Key Laboratory of Stomatology Kunming People's Republic of China

4. Department of Bioinformatics and Genomics, College of Computing and Informatics The University of North Carolina at Charlotte Charlotte North Carolina USA

5. Department of Cardiovascular, The First People's Hospital of Yunnan Province The Affiliated Hospital of Kunming University of Science and Technology Kunming People's Republic of China

Abstract

AbstractIntestinal microbiota is considered to play an integral role in maintaining health of host by modulating several physiological functions including nutrition, metabolism and immunity. Accumulated data from human and animal studies indicate that intestinal microbes can affect lipid metabolism in host through various direct and indirect biological mechanisms. These mechanisms include the production of various signalling molecules by the intestinal microbiome, which exert a strong effect on lipid metabolism, bile secretion in the liver, reverse transport of cholesterol and energy expenditure and insulin sensitivity in peripheral tissues. This review discusses the findings of recent studies suggesting an emerging role of intestinal microbiota and its metabolites in regulating lipid metabolism and the association of intestinal microbiota with obesity. Additionally, we discuss the controversies and challenges in this research area. However, intestinal micro-organisms are also affected by some external factors, which in turn influence the regulation of microbial lipid metabolism. Therefore, we also discuss the effects of probiotics, prebiotics, diet structure, exercise and other factors on intestinal microbiological changes and lipid metabolism regulation.

Funder

Yunnan Province Qiu Shengxiang Expert Workstation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine,Biotechnology

Reference125 articles.

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