Impact of the gut microbiota and associated metabolites on cardiometabolic traits, chronic diseases and human longevity: a Mendelian randomization study.
Éloi GagnonPatricia L MitchellHasanga D ManikpurageErik AbnerNele TabaTõnu EskoNooshin GhodsianSébastien ThériaultPatrick MathieuBenoit J ArsenaultPublished in: Journal of translational medicine (2023)
Features of the gut microbiota have been associated with several chronic diseases and longevity in preclinical models as well as in observational studies. Whether these relations underlie causal effects in humans remains to be established. We aimed to determine whether the gut microbiota influences cardiometabolic traits as well as the risk of chronic diseases and human longevity using a comprehensive 2-Sample Mendelian randomization approach. We included as exposures 10 gut-associated metabolites and pathways and 57 microbial taxa abundance. We included as outcomes nine cardiometabolic traits (fasting glucose, fasting insulin, systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, HDL cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, triglycerides, estimated glomerular filtration rate, body mass index [BMI]), eight chronic diseases previously linked with the gut microbiota in observational studies (Alzheimer's disease, depression, type 2 diabetes, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, coronary artery disease (CAD), stroke, osteoporosis and chronic kidney disease), as well as parental lifespan and longevity. We found 7 associations with evidence of causality before and after sensitivity analyses, but not after multiple testing correction (1198 tests). Most effect sizes (4/7) were small. The two largest exposure-outcome effects were markedly attenuated towards the null upon inclusion of BMI or alcohol intake frequency in multivariable MR analyses. While finding robust genetic instruments for microbiota features is challenging hence potentially inflating type 2 errors, these results do not support a large causal impact of human gut microbita features on cardiometabolic traits, chronic diseases or longevity. These results also suggest that the previously documented associations between gut microbiota and human health outcomes may not always underly causal relations.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- endothelial cells
- body mass index
- type diabetes
- coronary artery disease
- chronic kidney disease
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- genome wide
- blood glucose
- pluripotent stem cells
- left ventricular
- heart failure
- ms ms
- insulin resistance
- magnetic resonance
- physical activity
- glycemic control
- drosophila melanogaster
- hypertensive patients
- gene expression
- cardiovascular disease
- end stage renal disease
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- cognitive decline
- acute coronary syndrome
- patient safety
- stem cells
- magnetic resonance imaging
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement
- high density
- sleep quality
- coronary artery bypass grafting
- brain injury
- electronic health record
- cerebral ischemia