Gut microbiota Modulated by Probiotics and Garcinia cambogia Extract Correlate with Weight Gain and Adipocyte Sizes in High Fat-Fed Mice

Jae-Young Heo(Seoul National University), Minseok Seo(Seoul National University), Hwanhee Park(Inha University), Woon Kyu Lee(Inha University), Le Luo Guan(University of Alberta), Joon Yoon(Seoul National University), Kelsey Caetano-Anollés(Seoul National University), Hyeonju Ahn(Seoul National University), Se‐Young Kim(Hyundai Motor Group (South Korea)), Yoon-Mo Kang(Hyundai Motor Group (South Korea)), Seoae Cho(Seoul National University), Heebal Kim(Seoul National University)
Scientific Reports
September 23, 2016
Cited by 53Open Access
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Abstract

Results of recent studies on gut microbiota have suggested that obesogenic bacteria exacerbate obesity and metabolic dysfunction in the host when fed a high fat diet (HFD). In order to explore obesity-associated bacterial candidates and their response to diet, the composition of faecal bacterial communities was investigated by analyzing 16S rRNA gene sequences in mice. Dietary intervention with probiotics and Garcinia cambogia extract attenuated weight gain and adipocyte size in HFD-fed mice. To identify obesity-causative microbiota, two statistical analyses were performed. Forty-eight bacterial species were found to overlap between the two analyses, indicating the commonly identified species as diet-driven and obesity-associated, which would make them strong candidates for host-microbiome interaction on obesity. Finally, correlation based network analysis between diet, microbe, and host revealed that Clostridium aminophilum, a hyper-ammonia-producing bacterium, was highly correlated with obesity phenotypes and other associated bacteria, and shown to be suppressed by the combination of probiotics and Garcinia cambogia extract. Results of the present study suggest that probiotics and Garcinia cambogia extract alleviate weight gain and adiposity, in part via differentially modulating the composition of gut microbiota in HFD fed mice.


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