Causal relationships between the gut microbiome, blood lipids, and heart failure: a Mendelian randomization analysis

Author:

Dai Huajie12,Hou Tianzhichao12,Wang Qi12,Hou Yanan12,Wang Tiange12ORCID,Zheng Jie123ORCID,Lin Hong12,Zhao Zhiyun12ORCID,Li Mian12,Wang Shuangyuan12,Zhang Di12,Dai Meng12,Zheng Ruizhi12,Lu Jieli12ORCID,Xu Yu12ORCID,Chen Yuhong12,Ning Guang12,Wang Weiqing12,Bi Yufang12,Xu Min12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Endocrine and Metabolic Diseases, Shanghai Institute of Endocrine and Metabolic Diseases, Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine , Shanghai, 200025 , China

2. Shanghai National Clinical Research Center for Metabolic Diseases, Key Laboratory for Endocrine and Metabolic Diseases of the National Health Commission of the PR China, Shanghai Key Laboratory for Endocrine Tumor, State Key Laboratory of Medical Genomics, Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine , Shanghai, 200025 , China

3. MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol , Bristol, BS8 2BN , UK

Abstract

Abstract Aims Studies have linked gut microbiome and heart failure (HF). However, their causal relationships and potential mediating factors have not been well defined. To investigate the causal relationships between the gut microbiome and HF and the mediating effect of potential blood lipids by using genetics. Methods and results We performed a bidirectional and mediation Mendelian randomization (MR) study using summary statistics from the genome-wide association studies of gut microbial taxa (Dutch Microbiome Project, n = 7738), blood lipids (UK Biobank, n = 115 078), and a meta-analysis of HF (115 150 cases and 1550 331 controls). We applied the inverse–variance weighted estimation method as the primary method, with several other estimators as complementary methods. The multivariable MR approach based on Bayesian model averaging (MR-BMA) was used to prioritize the most likely causal lipids. Six microbial taxa are suggestively associated with HF causally. The most significant taxon was the species Bacteroides dorei [odds ratio = 1.059, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.022–1.097, P-value = 0.0017]. The MR-BMA analysis showed that apolipoprotein B (ApoB) was the most likely causal lipid for HF (the marginal inclusion probability = 0.717, P-value = 0.005). The mediation MR analysis showed that ApoB mediated the causal effects of species B. dorei on HF (proportion mediated = 10.1%, 95% CI = 0.2–21.6%, P-value = 0.031). Conclusion The study suggested a causal relationship between specific gut microbial taxa and HF and that ApoB might mediate this relationship as the primary lipid determinant of HF.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Shanghai Municipal Education Commission–Gaofeng Clinical Medicine

Shanghai Shenkang Hospital Development Center

Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine

Ruijin Hospital

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Epidemiology

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