Analyses of gut microbiota and plasma bile acids enable stratification of patients for antidiabetic treatment

Yanyun Gu(Ruijin Hospital), Xiaokai Wang(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Junhua Li(BGI Group (China)), Yifei Zhang(Ruijin Hospital), Huanzi Zhong(University of Copenhagen), Ruixin Liu(Ruijin Hospital), Dongya Zhang(China National GeneBank), Qiang Feng(China National GeneBank), Xiaoyan Xie(Ruijin Hospital), Jie Hong(Ruijin Hospital), Huahui Ren(BGI Group (China)), Wei Liu(Renji Hospital), Jing Ma(Renji Hospital), Qing Su(XinHua Hospital), Hongmei Zhang(XinHua Hospital), Jialin Yang(Fudan University), Xiaoling Wang(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Xinjie Zhao(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Weiqiong Gu(Ruijin Hospital), Yufang Bi(Ruijin Hospital), Yongde Peng(Shanghai First People's Hospital), Xiaoqiang Xu(China National GeneBank), Huihua Xia(BGI Group (China)), Fang Li(BGI Group (China)), Xun Xu(China National GeneBank), Huanming Yang(China National GeneBank), Guowang Xu(Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics), Lise Madsen(China National GeneBank), Karsten Kristiansen(University of Copenhagen), Guang Ning(Ruijin Hospital), Weiqing Wang(Ruijin Hospital)
Nature Communications
November 21, 2017
Cited by 408Open Access
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Abstract

Antidiabetic medication may modulate the gut microbiota and thereby alter plasma and faecal bile acid (BA) composition, which may improve metabolic health. Here we show that treatment with Acarbose, but not Glipizide, increases the ratio between primary BAs and secondary BAs and plasma levels of unconjugated BAs in treatment-naive type 2 diabetes (T2D) patients, which may beneficially affect metabolism. Acarbose increases the relative abundances of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium in the gut microbiota and depletes Bacteroides, thereby changing the relative abundance of microbial genes involved in BA metabolism. Treatment outcomes of Acarbose are dependent on gut microbiota compositions prior to treatment. Compared to patients with a gut microbiota dominated by Prevotella, those with a high abundance of Bacteroides exhibit more changes in plasma BAs and greater improvement in metabolic parameters after Acarbose treatment. Our work highlights the potential for stratification of T2D patients based on their gut microbiota prior to treatment.


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