Gut Microbial Signatures of Distinct Trimethylamine N-Oxide Response to Raspberry Consumption.
Maximilien FranckJuan de Toro-MartínThibault V VarinVéronique GarneauGeneviève PilonDenis RoyPatrick CoutureCharles CouillardAndré MaretteMarie-Claude VohlPublished in: Nutrients (2022)
The aim of this exploratory study was to evaluate the gut microbial signatures of distinct trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) responses following raspberry consumption. Investigations were carried out in 24 subjects at risk of developing metabolic syndrome who received 280 g/day of frozen raspberries for 8 weeks. Blood and stool samples were collected at weeks 0 and 8. Inter-individual variability in plasma TMAO levels was analyzed, 7 subjects were excluded due to noninformative signals and 17 subjects were kept for analysis and further stratified according to their TMAO response. Whole-metagenome shotgun sequencing analysis was used to determine the impact of raspberry consumption on gut microbial composition. Before the intervention, the relative abundance of Actinobacteriota was significantly higher in participants whose TMAO levels increased after the intervention ( p = 0.03). The delta TMAO (absolute differences of baseline and week 8 levels) was positively associated with the abundance of gut bacteria such as Bilophila wadsworthia ( p = 0.02; r 2 = 0.37), from the genus Granulicatella ( p = 0.03; r 2 = 0.48) or the Erysipelotrichia class ( p = 0.03; r 2 = 0.45). Changes in the gut microbial ecology induced by raspberry consumption over an 8-week period presumably impacted quaternary amines-utilizing activity and thus plasma TMAO levels.