International Journal of Hypertension (Jan 2022)

Human Gut Microbes Associated with Systolic Blood Pressure

  • Tulsi Kumari Joishy,
  • Aashish Jha,
  • Mai Oudah,
  • Santanu Das,
  • Atanu Adak,
  • Dibyayan Deb,
  • Mojibur Rohman Khan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2022/2923941
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2022

Abstract

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Emerging studies have revealed a strong link between the gut microbiome and several human diseases. Since human gut microbiome mirrors variations in lifestyle and environment, whether associations between disease conditions and gut microbiome are consistent across populations—particularly in communities practicing traditional subsistence strategies whose microbiomes differ markedly from industrialists—remains unknown. Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of mortality in India affecting 55 million people, and high blood pressure is one of the primary risk factors for cardiovascular diseases. We examined associations between gut microbiome and blood pressure along with 14 other variables associated with lifestyle, dietary habits, disease conditions, and clinical blood markers in the three Assamese populations. Our analysis reveals a robust link between the gut microbiome diversity and composition and systolic blood pressure. Moreover, several genera previously associated with hypertension in non-Indian populations were also associated with systolic blood pressure in this cohort and these genera were predictors of elevated blood pressure in these populations. These findings confer opportunities to design personalized, preventative, and targeted interventions harnessing the gut microbiome to tackle the burden of cardiovascular diseases in India.