[PDF][PDF] Effects of gut microbiota manipulation by antibiotics on host metabolism in obese humans: a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial

D Reijnders, GH Goossens, GDA Hermes, EPJG Neis… - Cell metabolism, 2016 - cell.com
D Reijnders, GH Goossens, GDA Hermes, EPJG Neis, CM van der Beek, J Most, JJ Holst
Cell metabolism, 2016cell.com
The gut microbiota has been implicated in obesity and cardiometabolic diseases, although
evidence in humans is scarce. We investigated how gut microbiota manipulation by
antibiotics (7-day administration of amoxicillin, vancomycin, or placebo) affects host
metabolism in 57 obese, prediabetic men. Vancomycin, but not amoxicillin, decreased
bacterial diversity and reduced Firmicutes involved in short-chain fatty acid and bile acid
metabolism, concomitant with altered plasma and/or fecal metabolite concentrations …
Summary
The gut microbiota has been implicated in obesity and cardiometabolic diseases, although evidence in humans is scarce. We investigated how gut microbiota manipulation by antibiotics (7-day administration of amoxicillin, vancomycin, or placebo) affects host metabolism in 57 obese, prediabetic men. Vancomycin, but not amoxicillin, decreased bacterial diversity and reduced Firmicutes involved in short-chain fatty acid and bile acid metabolism, concomitant with altered plasma and/or fecal metabolite concentrations. Adipose tissue gene expression of oxidative pathways was upregulated by antibiotics, whereas immune-related pathways were downregulated by vancomycin. Antibiotics did not affect tissue-specific insulin sensitivity, energy/substrate metabolism, postprandial hormones and metabolites, systemic inflammation, gut permeability, and adipocyte size. Importantly, energy harvest, adipocyte size, and whole-body insulin sensitivity were not altered at 8-week follow-up, despite a still considerably altered microbial composition, indicating that interference with adult microbiota by 7-day antibiotic treatment has no clinically relevant impact on metabolic health in obese humans.
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