Impaired Autonomic Nervous System-Microbiome Circuit in Hypertension

Author:

Zubcevic Jasenka1,Richards Elaine M.2,Yang Tao2,Kim Seungbum2,Sumners Colin2,Pepine Carl J.3,Raizada Mohan K.2

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Physiological Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine (J.Z.), University of Florida, Gainesville.

2. Department of Physiology and Functional Genomics, College of Medicine (E.M.R., T.Y., S.K., C.S., M.K.R.), University of Florida, Gainesville.

3. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Medicine, College of Medicine (C.J.P.), University of Florida, Gainesville.

Abstract

Hypertension affects an estimated 103 million Americans, yet gaps in knowledge continue to limit its successful management. Rapidly emerging evidence is linking gut dysbiosis to many disorders and diseases including hypertension. The evolution of the -omics techniques has allowed determination of the abundance and potential function of gut bacterial species by next-generation bacterial sequencing, whereas metabolomics techniques report shifts in bacterial metabolites in the systemic circulation of hypertensive patients and rodent models of hypertension. The gut microbiome and host have evolved to exist in balance and cooperation, and there is extensive crosstalk between the 2 to maintain this balance, including during regulation of blood pressure. However, an understanding of the mechanisms of dysfunctional host-microbiome interactions in hypertension is still lacking. Here, we synthesize some of our recent data with published reports and present concepts and a rationale for our emerging hypothesis of a dysfunctional gut-brain axis in hypertension. Hopefully, this new information will improve the understanding of hypertension and help to address some of these knowledge gaps.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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