Differential effects of Akkermansia-enriched fecal microbiota transplant on energy balance in female mice on high-fat diet

富含 Akkermansia 的粪便微生物群移植对高脂饮食雌性小鼠能量平衡的不同影响

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作者:Kalpana D Acharya, Randall H Friedline, Doyle V Ward, Madeline E Graham, Lauren Tauer, Doris Zheng, Xiaodi Hu, Willem M de Vos, Beth A McCormick, Jason K Kim, Marc J Tetel

Abstract

Estrogens protect against weight gain and metabolic disruption in women and female rodents. Aberrations in the gut microbiota composition are linked to obesity and metabolic disorders. Furthermore, estrogen-mediated protection against diet-induced metabolic disruption is associated with modifications in gut microbiota. In this study, we tested if estradiol (E2)-mediated protection against obesity and metabolic disorders in female mice is dependent on gut microbiota. Specifically, we tested if fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) from E2-treated lean female mice, supplemented with or without Akkermansia muciniphila, prevented high fat diet (HFD)-induced body weight gain, fat mass gain, and hyperglycemia in female recipients. FMT from, and cohousing with, E2-treated lean donors was not sufficient to transfer the metabolic benefits to the E2-deficient female recipients. Moreover, FMT from lean donors supplemented with A. muciniphila exacerbated HFD-induced hyperglycemia in E2-deficient recipients, suggesting its detrimental effect on the metabolic health of E2-deficient female rodents fed a HFD. Given that A. muciniphila attenuates HFD-induced metabolic insults in males, the present findings suggest a sex difference in the impact of this microbe on metabolic health.

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