某种肠道细菌
疣状疣
失调
生物
微生物群
阿克曼西亚
移植
肠道菌群
医学
免疫学
生物信息学
蛋白质细菌
内科学
遗传学
拟杆菌
细菌
16S核糖体RNA
作者
Clea Bárcena,Rafael Valdés‐Mas,Pablo Mayoral,Cecilia Garabaya,Sylvère Durand,Francisco Rodríguez,María Teresa Fernández‐García,Nuria Salazar,Alicja Nogacka,Nuria Garatachea,Noélie Bossut,Fanny Aprahamian,Alejandro Lucía,Guido Kroemer,José M.P. Freije,Pedro M. Quirós,Carlos López‐Otín
出处
期刊:Nature Medicine
[Springer Nature]
日期:2019-07-22
卷期号:25 (8): 1234-1242
被引量:433
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41591-019-0504-5
摘要
The gut microbiome is emerging as a key regulator of several metabolic, immune and neuroendocrine pathways1,2. Gut microbiome deregulation has been implicated in major conditions such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, non-alcoholic fatty acid liver disease and cancer3–6, but its precise role in aging remains to be elucidated. Here, we find that two different mouse models of progeria are characterized by intestinal dysbiosis with alterations that include an increase in the abundance of Proteobacteria and Cyanobacteria, and a decrease in the abundance of Verrucomicrobia. Consistent with these findings, we found that human progeria patients also display intestinal dysbiosis and that long-lived humans (that is, centenarians) exhibit a substantial increase in Verrucomicrobia and a reduction in Proteobacteria. Fecal microbiota transplantation from wild-type mice enhanced healthspan and lifespan in both progeroid mouse models, and transplantation with the verrucomicrobia Akkermansia muciniphila was sufficient to exert beneficial effects. Moreover, metabolomic analysis of ileal content points to the restoration of secondary bile acids as a possible mechanism for the beneficial effects of reestablishing a healthy microbiome. Our results demonstrate that correction of the accelerated aging-associated intestinal dysbiosis is beneficial, suggesting the existence of a link between aging and the gut microbiota that provides a rationale for microbiome-based interventions against age-related diseases. Fecal microbiome transplantation or probiotic therapy with Akkermansia muciniphila extends the lifespan and improves the health status of progeroid mice, pointing to the importance of the gut microbiome in regulating lifespan and healthspan.
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