翻译(生物学)
啮齿动物
长双歧杆菌
啮齿动物模型
生物
人类肥胖
双歧杆菌
肥胖
医学
计算生物学
遗传学
病理
细菌
内科学
基因
乳酸菌
信使核糖核酸
生态学
作者
Harriët Schellekens,Cristina Torres‐Fuentes,Marcel van de Wouw,Caitríona M. Long-Smith,Avery Mitchell,Conall Strain,Kirsten Berding,Thomaz F. S. Bastiaanssen,Kieran Rea,Anna V. Golubeva,Silvia Arboleya,Mathieu Verpaalen,Matteo M. Pusceddu,Amy Murphy,Fiona Fouhy,Kiera Murphy,R. Paul Ross,Lal Bahadur Roy,Catherine Stanton,Timothy G. Dinan,John F. Cryan
出处
期刊:EBioMedicine
[Elsevier BV]
日期:2020-12-18
卷期号:63: 103176-103176
被引量:86
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.ebiom.2020.103176
摘要
BackgroundThe human gut microbiota has emerged as a key factor in the development of obesity. Certain probiotic strains have shown anti-obesity effects. The objective of this study was to investigate whether Bifidobacterium longum APC1472 has anti-obesity effects in high-fat diet (HFD)-induced obese mice and whether B. longum APC1472 supplementation reduces body-mass index (BMI) in healthy overweight/obese individuals as the primary outcome. B. longum APC1472 effects on waist-to-hip ratio (W/H ratio) and on obesity-associated plasma biomarkers were analysed as secondary outcomes.MethodsB. longum APC1472 was administered to HFD-fed C57BL/6 mice in drinking water for 16 weeks. In the human intervention trial, participants received B. longum APC1472 or placebo supplementation for 12 weeks, during which primary and secondary outcomes were measured at the beginning and end of the intervention.FindingsB. longum APC1472 supplementation was associated with decreased bodyweight, fat depots accumulation and increased glucose tolerance in HFD-fed mice. While, in healthy overweight/obese adults, the supplementation of B. longum APC1472 strain did not change primary outcomes of BMI (0.03, 95% CI [-0.4, 0.3]) or W/H ratio (0.003, 95% CI [-0.01, 0.01]), a positive effect on the secondary outcome of fasting blood glucose levels was found (-0.299, 95% CI [-0.44, -0.09]).InterpretationThis study shows a positive translational effect of B. longum APC1472 on fasting blood glucose from a preclinical mouse model of obesity to a human intervention study in otherwise healthy overweight and obese individuals. This highlights the promising potential of B. longum APC1472 to be developed as a valuable supplement in reducing specific markers of obesity.FundingThis research was funded in part by Science Foundation Ireland in the form of a Research Centre grant (SFI/12/RC/2273) to APC Microbiome Ireland and by a research grant from Cremo S.A.
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