Author:
Kim Gihyeon,Yoon Youngmin,Park Jin Ho,Park Jae Won,Noh Myung-guin,Kim Hyun,Park Changho,Kwon Hyuktae,Park Jeong-hyeon,Kim Yena,Sohn Jinyoung,Park Shinyoung,Kim Hyeonhui,Im Sun-Kyoung,Kim Yeongmin,Chung Ha Yung,Nam Myung Hee,Kwon Jee Young,Kim Il Yong,Kim Yong Jae,Baek Ji Hyeon,Kim Hak Su,Weinstock George M.,Cho Belong,Lee Charles,Fang Sungsoon,Park Hansoo,Seong Je Kyung
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Comparisons of the gut microbiome of lean and obese humans have revealed that obesity is associated with the gut microbiome plus changes in numerous environmental factors, including high-fat diet (HFD). Here, we report that two species of Bifidobacterium are crucial to controlling metabolic parameters in the Korean population.
Results
Based on gut microbial analysis from 99 Korean individuals, we observed the abundance of Bifidobacterium longum and Bifidobacterium bifidum was markedly reduced in individuals with increased visceral adipose tissue (VAT), body mass index (BMI), blood triglyceride (TG), and fatty liver. Bacterial transcriptomic analysis revealed that carbohydrate/nucleoside metabolic processes of Bifidobacterium longum and Bifidobacterium bifidum were associated with protecting against diet-induced obesity. Oral treatment of specific commercial Bifidobacterium longum and Bifidobacterium bifidum enhanced bile acid signaling contributing to potentiate oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) in adipose tissues, leading to reduction of body weight gain and improvement in hepatic steatosis and glucose homeostasis. Bifidobacterium longum or Bifidobacterium bifidum manipulated intestinal sterol biosynthetic processes to protect against diet-induced obesity in germ-free mice.
Conclusions
Our findings support the notion that treatment of carbohydrate/nucleoside metabolic processes-enriched Bifidobacterium longum and Bifidobacterium bifidum would be a novel therapeutic strategy for reprograming the host metabolic homeostasis to protect against metabolic syndromes, including diet-induced obesity.
Funder
Faculty research grant from the Yonsei University College of Medicine
Ministry of Health & Welfare
Ministry of Science and ICT, South Korea
Korea Mouse Phenotyping Project
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Microbiology (medical),Microbiology
Cited by
20 articles.
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