4.7 Article

Gut Microbiota Functional Dysbiosis Relates to Individual Diet in Subclinical Carotid Atherosclerosis

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu13020304

Keywords

Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Diseases; Gut Microbiota; next generation sequencing

Funding

  1. Cibo, Microbiota, Salute by Vini di Batasiolo S.p.A [AL_RIC19ABARA_01]
  2. Fondazione Umberto Veronesi [2020-3318]
  3. Fondazione Cariplo [2016-0852, 2015-0524, 2015-0564]
  4. EFSD/Lilly European Diabetes Research Programme 2018
  5. Fondazione Telethon [GGP19146]
  6. PRIN [2017K55HLC, 2017H5F943, 2017-LS 4 2017HTKLRF_003]
  7. H2020 REPROGRAM [PHC-03-2015/667837-2]
  8. ERANET [ER-2017-2364981]
  9. Ministry of Health-IRCCS MultiMedica [GR-2011-02346974]
  10. Ministry of Health-Ricerca Corrente-IRCCS MultiMedica

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The study found that subjects without clinically manifest ACVD tended to consume more cereals, starchy vegetables, and dairy products, while those with SCA consumed more meats. The diversity of dietary sources significantly overlapped with separations in GM composition, providing insights for potential personalized dietary intervention strategies.
Gut Microbiota (GM) dysbiosis associates with Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Diseases (ACVD), but whether this also holds true in subjects without clinically manifest ACVD represents a challenge of personalized prevention. We connected exposure to diet (self-reported by food diaries) and markers of Subclinical Carotid Atherosclerosis (SCA) with individual taxonomic and functional GM profiles (from fecal metagenomic DNA) of 345 subjects without previous clinically manifest ACVD. Subjects without SCA reported consuming higher amounts of cereals, starchy vegetables, milky products, yoghurts and bakery products versus those with SCA (who reported to consume more mechanically separated meats). The variety of dietary sources significantly overlapped with the separations in GM composition between subjects without SCA and those with SCA (RV coefficient between nutrients quantities and microbial relative abundances at genus level = 0.65, p-value = 0.047). Additionally, specific bacterial species (Faecalibacterium prausnitzii in the absence of SCA and Escherichia coli in the presence of SCA) are directly related to over-representation of metagenomic pathways linked to different dietary sources (sulfur oxidation and starch degradation in absence of SCA, and metabolism of amino acids, syntheses of palmitate, choline, carnitines and Trimethylamine n-oxide in presence of SCA). These findings might contribute to hypothesize future strategies of personalized dietary intervention for primary CVD prevention setting.

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