Methionine Restriction Regulates Cognitive Function in High‐Fat Diet‐Fed Mice: Roles of Diurnal Rhythms of SCFAs Producing‐ and Inflammation‐Related Microbes

Luanfeng Wang(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Bo Ren(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Hui Yan(BGI Group (China)), Chuanqi Chu(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Zhenting Zhao(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Yuyu Zhang(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Beita Zhao(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Renjie Shi(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Junli Ren(BGI Group (China)), Xiaoshuang Dai(BGI Group (China)), Zhigang Liu(North West Agriculture and Forestry University), Xuebo Liu(North West Agriculture and Forestry University)
Molecular Nutrition & Food Research
July 31, 2020
Cited by 58

Abstract

SCOPE: Methionine restriction (MR) is known to potently alleviate inflammation and improve gut microbiome in obese mice. The gut microbiome exhibits diurnal rhythmicity in composition and function, and this, in turn, drives oscillations in host metabolism. High-fat diet (HFD) strongly altered microbiome diurnal rhythmicity, however, the role of microbiome diurnal rhythmicity in mediating the improvement effects of MR on obesity-related metabolic disorders remains unclear. METHODS AND RESULTS: 10-week-old male C57BL/6J mice are fed a low-fat diet or HFD for 4 weeks, followed with a full diet (0.86% methionine, w/w) or a methionine-restricted diet (0.17% methionine, w/w) for 8 weeks. Analyzing microbiome diurnal rhythmicity at six time points, the results show that HFD disrupts the cyclical fluctuations of the gut microbiome in mice. MR partially restores these cyclical fluctuations, which lead to time-specifically enhance the abundance of short-chain fatty acids producing bacteria, increases the acetate and butyric, and dampens the oscillation of inflammation-related Desulfovibrionales and Staphylococcaceae over the course of 1 day. Notably, MR, which protects against systemic inflammation, influences brain function and synaptic plasticity. CONCLUSION: MR could serve as a potential nutritional intervention for attenuating obesity-induced cognitive impairments by balancing the circadian rhythm in microbiome-gut-brain homeostasis.


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