氧化三甲胺
胆碱
生物
肠道菌群
代谢物
移植
粪便细菌疗法
三甲胺
微生物学
免疫学
冲程(发动机)
内科学
生物化学
医学
抗生素
机械工程
艰难梭菌
工程类
作者
Weifei Zhu,Kymberleigh A. Romano,Lin Li,Jennifer A. Buffa,Naseer Sangwan,Prem Prakash,Aaron N. Tittle,Xin-Min Li,Xiaoming Fu,Charlie Androjna,Anthony J. DiDonato,Kimberly Brinson,Bruce D. Trapp,Michael A. Fischbach,Federico E. Rey,Adeline M. Hajjar,Joseph A. DiDonato,Stanley L. Hazen
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.chom.2021.05.002
摘要
Summary
Clinical studies have demonstrated associations between circulating levels of the gut-microbiota-derived metabolite trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) and stroke incident risk. However, a causal role of gut microbes in stroke has not yet been demonstrated. Herein we show that gut microbes, through dietary choline and TMAO generation, directly impact cerebral infarct size and adverse outcomes following stroke. Fecal microbial transplantation from low- versus high-TMAO-producing human subjects into germ-free mice shows that both TMAO generation and stroke severity are transmissible traits. Furthermore, employing multiple murine stroke models and transplantation of defined microbial communities with genetically engineered human commensals into germ-free mice, we demonstrate that the microbial cutC gene (an enzymatic source of choline-to-TMA transformation) is sufficient to transmit TMA/TMAO production, heighten cerebral infarct size, and lead to functional impairment. We thus reveal that gut microbiota in general, specifically the metaorganismal TMAO pathway, directly contributes to stroke severity.
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