Dietary pattern, colonic microbiota and immunometabolism interaction: new frontiers for diabetes mellitus and related disorders.
Majid EslamiA BaharM HematiZ Rasouli NejadF MehranfarS KaramiNazarii KobyliakB YousefiPublished in: Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association (2020)
In this review, the numerous possible mechanisms that provide supportive evidence for how colonic dysbiosis denotes metabolic dysfunction, dysregulates glucose homeostasis and leads to diabetes mellitus and related metabolic disorders are defined. Information was gathered from articles identified by systematic reviews and searches using Google, PubMed and Scopus. The composition of the colonic microbiota plays an integral role in maintaining host homeostasis by affecting both metabolic activities and underlying functional gene transcription in individuals with diabetes and related metabolic disorders. Increased colonic microbiome-derived concentrations of lipopolysaccharides, also known as 'metabolic endotoxaemia', as well as alterations in bile acid metabolism, short-chain fatty acids, intestinal hormones and branched-chain amino acid secretion have been associated with the diverse production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and the recruitment of inflammatory cells. It has been shown that changes to intestinal bacterial composition are significant even in early childhood and are associated with the pathogenesis of both types of diabetes. We hope that an improved understanding of related mechanisms linking the colonic microbiome with glucose metabolism might provide for innovative therapeutic approaches that would bring the ideal intestinal ecosystem to a state of optimal health, thus preventing and treating diabetes and related metabolic disorders.
Keyphrases
- type diabetes
- glycemic control
- cardiovascular disease
- ulcerative colitis
- healthcare
- systematic review
- oxidative stress
- fatty acid
- public health
- mental health
- climate change
- transcription factor
- blood pressure
- induced apoptosis
- gene expression
- randomized controlled trial
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- health information
- weight loss
- signaling pathway
- cell death
- cell proliferation
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- anti inflammatory
- human health