4.7 Article

Gut-Flora-Dependent Metabolite Trimethylamine-N-Oxide Promotes Atherosclerosis-Associated Inflammation Responses by Indirect ROS Stimulation and Signaling Involving AMPK and SIRT1

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 14, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu14163338

Keywords

TMAO; ROS; inflammation; gut microbiota; choline; atherosclerosis

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFA0901702]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31900233]
  3. Shandong Key RD Program [2019GSF107088]
  4. Outstanding Youth Innovation Team of Shandong High Universities [2019kJe117]

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This study revealed the mechanistic link between TMAO and atherosclerosis risk, showing that TMAO induces vascular inflammation. It was found that TMAO suppresses the expression of AMPK and SIRT1, while AMPK and SIRT1 play important roles in regulating ROS and inflammation. Glutathione and probiotics can relieve TMAO-induced atherosclerosis.
Trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO), a gut-microbiota-dependent metabolite after ingesting dietary choline, has been identified as a novel risk factor for atherosclerosis through inducing vascular inflammation. However, the underlying molecular mechanism is poorly understood. Using an in vitro vascular cellular model, we found that the TMAO-induced inflammation responses were correlated with an elevation of ROS levels and downregulation of SIRT1 expression in VSMCs and HUVECs. The overexpression of SIRT1 could abrogate both the stimulation of ROS and inflammation. Further studies revealed that AMPK was also suppressed by TMAO and was a mediator upstream of SIRT1. Activation of AMPK by AICAR could reduce TMAO-induced ROS and inflammation. Moreover, the GSH precursor NAC could attenuate TMAO-induced inflammation. In vivo studies with mice models also showed that choline-induced production of TMAO and the associated glycolipid metabolic changes leading to atherosclerosis could be relieved by NAC and a probiotic LP8198. Collectively, the present study revealed an unrecognized mechanistic link between TMAO and atherosclerosis risk, and probiotics ameliorated TMAO-induced atherosclerosis through affecting the gut microbiota. Consistent with previous studies, our data confirmed that TMAO could stimulate inflammation by modulating cellular ROS levels. However, this was not due to direct cytotoxicity but through complex signaling pathways involving AMPK and SIRT1.

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