Microbial metabolites in chronic heart failure and its common comorbidities

Author:

Hua Sha1,Lv Bomin2,Qiu Zeping1ORCID,Li Zhuojin1,Wang Zhiyan1,Chen Yanjia1,Han Yanxin1,Tucker Katherine L3ORCID,Wu Hao2ORCID,Jin Wei1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Heart Failure Center, Ruijin Hospital and Ruijin Hospital Lu Wan Branch Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine Shanghai China

2. State Key Laboratory of Genetic Engineering, Human Phenome Institute, Fudan Microbiome Center, Department of Bariatric and Metabolic Surgery, Huashan Hospital Fudan University Shanghai China

3. Department of Biomedical and Nutritional Sciences University of Massachusetts Lowell Lowell MA USA

Abstract

AbstractThis study aimed to identify microbial signatures that contribute to the shared etiologies between chronic heart failure (CHF), type 2 diabetes, and chronic kidney disease. The serum levels of 151 microbial metabolites were measured in 260 individuals from the Risk Evaluation and Management of heart failure cohort, and it was found that those metabolites varied by an order of 105 fold. Out of 96 metabolites associated with the three cardiometabolic diseases, most were validated in two geographically independent cohorts. In all three cohorts, 16 metabolites including imidazole propionate (ImP) consistently showed significant differences. Notably, baseline ImP levels were three times higher in the Chinese compared with the Swedish cohorts and increased by 1.1–1.6 fold with each additional CHF comorbidity in the Chinese population. Cellular experiments further supported a causal link between ImP and distinct CHF relevant phenotypes. Additionally, key microbial metabolite‐based risk scores were superior in CHF prognosis than the traditional Framingham or Get with the Guidelines‐Heart Failure risk scores. Interactive visualization of these specific metabolite‐disease links is available on our omics data server (https://omicsdata.org/Apps/REM‐HF/).

Funder

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai

Program of Shanghai Academic Research Leader

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Molecular Medicine

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