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Causal relationships among the gut microbiome, short-chain fatty acids and metabolic diseases.

Serena SannaNatalie R van ZuydamAnubha MahajanAlexander KurilshikovArnau Vich VilaUrmo VõsaZlatan MujagicAd A M MascleeDaisy M A E JonkersMarije OostingLeo A B JoostenMihai M NeteaLude H FrankeAlexandra ZhernakovaJingyuan FuCisca WijmengaMark I McCarthy
Published in: Nature genetics (2019)
Microbiome-wide association studies on large population cohorts have highlighted associations between the gut microbiome and complex traits, including type 2 diabetes (T2D) and obesity1. However, the causal relationships remain largely unresolved. We leveraged information from 952 normoglycemic individuals for whom genome-wide genotyping, gut metagenomic sequence and fecal short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) levels were available2, then combined this information with genome-wide-association summary statistics for 17 metabolic and anthropometric traits. Using bidirectional Mendelian randomization (MR) analyses to assess causality3, we found that the host-genetic-driven increase in gut production of the SCFA butyrate was associated with improved insulin response after an oral glucose-tolerance test (P = 9.8 × 10-5), whereas abnormalities in the production or absorption of another SCFA, propionate, were causally related to an increased risk of T2D (P = 0.004). These data provide evidence of a causal effect of the gut microbiome on metabolic traits and support the use of MR as a means to elucidate causal relationships from microbiome-wide association findings.
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