肠道微生物群
代谢组
寄主(生物学)
微生物群
肠道菌群
生物
人口
基因组
代谢组学
动物
生理学
生态学
免疫学
生物信息学
遗传学
医学
基因
环境卫生
作者
Jiguo Zhang,Hongwei Qi,Meihui Li,Zhihong Wang,Xiaofang Jia,Tianyong Sun,Shufa Du,Chang Su,Mengfan Zhi,Wenwen Du,Yifei Ouyang,Pingping Wang,Feifei Huang,Hongru Jiang,Li Li,Jing Bai,Wei Wang,Xiaofan Zhang,Huijun Wang,Bing Zhang,Qiang Feng
标识
DOI:10.1002/advs.202310068
摘要
Abstract The impact of external factors on the human gut microbiota and how gut microbes contribute to human health is an intriguing question. Here, the gut microbiome of 3,224 individuals (496 with serum metabolome) with 109 variables is studied. Multiple analyses reveal that geographic factors explain the greatest variance of the gut microbiome and the similarity of individuals’ gut microbiome is negatively correlated with their geographic distance. Main food components are the most important factors that mediate the impact of host habitats on the gut microbiome. Diet and gut microbes collaboratively contribute to the variation of serum metabolites, and correlate to the increase or decrease of certain clinical indexes. Specifically, systolic blood pressure is lowered by vegetable oil through increasing the abundance of Blautia and reducing the serum level of 1‐palmitoyl‐2‐palmitoleoyl‐GPC (16:0/16:1), but it is reduced by fruit intake through increasing the serum level of Blautia improved threonate. Besides, aging‐related clinical indexes are also closely correlated with the variation of gut microbes and serum metabolites. In this study, the linkages of geographic locations, diet, the gut microbiome, serum metabolites, and physiological indexes in a Chinese population are characterized. It is proved again that gut microbes and their metabolites are important media for external factors to affect human health.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI