Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety (Oct 2024)

Gut microbiome and function are altered for individuals living in high fluoride concentration areas in Pakistan

  • Sara Bibi,
  • Caroline Kerbiriou,
  • Uzma,
  • Shona Mckirdy,
  • Anastasiia Kostrytsia,
  • Hifza Rasheed,
  • Syed Ali Musstjab Akber Shah Eqani,
  • Konstantinos Gerasimidis,
  • Syed Muhammad Nurulain,
  • Umer Zeeshan Ijaz

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 284
p. 116959

Abstract

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Background: Endemic fluorosis refers to the condition when individuals are exposed to excessive amounts of fluoride ion due to living in a region characterized by elevated levels of fluorine in the drinking water, food, and/or air. In Pakistan, a substantial proportion of the population is thereby affected, posing a public health concern. Objectives: Assessing how the gut microbiota and its metabolic profiles are impacted by chronic exposure to fluoride in drinking water (that caused Dental Fluorosis) as well as to perceive how this microbiota is connected to adverse health outcomes prevailing with fluoride exposure. Methods: Drinking water (n=27) and biological samples (n=100) of blood, urine and feces were collected from 70 high fluoride exposed (with Dental Fluorosis) and 30 healthy control (without Dental Fluorosis) subjects. Water and urinary fluoride concentrations were determined. Serum/plasma biochemical testing was performed. Fecal DNA extraction, 16S rRNA analysis of microbial taxa, their predicted metabolic function and fecal short chain fatty acids (SCFAs) quantification were carried out. Results: The study revealed that microbiota taxonomic shifts and their metabolic characterization had been linked to certain host clinical parameters under the chronic fluoride exposure. Some sets of genera showed strong specificity to water and urine fluoride concentrations, Relative Fat Mass index and SCFAs. The SCFAs response in fluoride-exposed samples was observed to be correlated with bacterial taxa that could contribute to adverse health effects. Conclusions: Microbial dysbiosis as a result of endemic fluorosis exhibits a structure that is associated with risk of metabolic deregulation and is implicated in various diseases. Our results may form the development of novel interventions and may have utility in diagnosis and monitoring.

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