Microbiology Spectrum (Feb 2022)

Gut Microbiome-Targeted Modulations Regulate Metabolic Profiles and Alleviate Altitude-Related Cardiac Hypertrophy in Rats

  • Yichen Hu,
  • Zhiyuan Pan,
  • Zongyu Huang,
  • Yan Li,
  • Ni Han,
  • Xiaomei Zhuang,
  • Hui Peng,
  • Quansheng Gao,
  • Qing Wang,
  • B. J. Yang Lee,
  • Heping Zhang,
  • Ruifu Yang,
  • Yujing Bi,
  • Zhenjiang Zech Xu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01053-21
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1

Abstract

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ABSTRACT It is well known that humans physiologically or pathologically respond to high altitude, with these responses accompanied by alterations in the gut microbiome. To investigate whether gut microbiota modulation can alleviate high-altitude-related diseases, we administered probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics in rat model with altitude-related cardiac impairment after hypobaric hypoxia challenge and observed that all three treatments alleviated cardiac hypertrophy as measured by heart weight-to-body weight ratio and gene expression levels of biomarkers in heart tissue. The disruption of gut microbiota induced by hypobaric hypoxia was also ameliorated, especially for microbes of Ruminococcaceae and Lachnospiraceae families. Metabolome revealed that hypobaric hypoxia significantly altered the plasma short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), bile acids (BAs), amino acids, neurotransmitters, and free fatty acids, but not the overall fecal SCFAs and BAs. The treatments were able to restore homeostasis of plasma amino acids and neurotransmitters to a certain degree, but not for the other measured metabolites. This study paves the way to further investigate the underlying mechanisms of gut microbiome in high-altitude related diseases and opens opportunity to target gut microbiome for therapeutic purpose. IMPORTANCE Evidence suggests that gut microbiome changes upon hypobaric hypoxia exposure; however, it remains elusive whether this microbiome change is a merely derivational reflection of host physiological alteration, or it synergizes to exacerbate high-altitude diseases. We intervened gut microbiome in the rat model of prolonged hypobaric hypoxia challenge and found that the intervention could alleviate the symptoms of pathological cardiac hypertrophy, gut microbial dysbiosis, and metabolic disruptions of certain metabolites in gut and plasma induced by hypobaric hypoxia. Our study suggests that gut microbiome may be a causative factor for high-altitude-related pathogenesis and a target for therapeutic intervention.

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