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Gut microbiota dysbiosis promotes age-related atrial fibrillation by lipopolysaccharide and glucose-induced activation of NLRP3-inflammasome

Yun Zhang, Song Zhang, Bolin Li, Yingchun Luo, Yongtai Gong, Xuexin Jin, Jiawei Zhang, Yun Zhou, Xiaozhen Zhuo, Zixi Wang, Xinbo Zhao, Xuejie Han, Yunlong Gao, Hui Yu, Desen Liang

Cardiovascular Research · 2021 · ▲ 273 citations

Abstract

AIMS: Ageing is the most significant contributor to the increasing prevalence of atrial fibrillation (AF). The gut microbiota dysbiosis is involved in age-related diseases. However, whether the aged-associated dysbiosis contributes to age-related AF is still unknown. Direct demonstration that the aged gut microbiota is sufficient to transmit the enhanced AF susceptibility in a young host via microbiota-intestinal barrier-atria axis has not yet been reported. This study aimed to determine whether gut microbiota dysbiosis affects age-related AF. METHODS AND RESULTS: Herein, by using a faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) rat model, we demonstrated that the high AF susceptibility of aged rats could be transmitted to a young host. Specially, we found the dramatically increased levels of circulating lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and glucose led to the up-regulated expression of NOD-like receptor protein (NLRP)-3 inflammasome, promoting the development of AF, which depended on the enhanced atrial fibrosis in recipient host. Inhibition of inflammasome by a potent and selective inhibitor of the NLRP3 inflammasome, MCC950, resulted in a lower atrial fibrosis and AF susceptibility. Then, we conducted cross-sectional clinical studies to explore the effect of ageing on the altering trends with glucose levels and circulating LPS among clinical individuals in two China hospitals. We found that both of serum LPS and glucose levels were progressively increased in elderly patients as compared with those young. Furthermore, the ageing phenotype of circulating LPS and glucose levels, intestinal structure and atrial NLRP3-inflammasome of rats were also confirmed in clinical AF patients. Finally, aged rats colonized with youthful microbiota restored intestinal structure and atrial NLRP3-inflammasome activity, which suppressed the development of aged-related AF. CONCLUSIONS: Collectively, these studies described a novel causal role of aberrant gut microbiota in the pathogenesis of age-related AF, which indicates that the microbiota-intestinal barrier-atrial NLRP3 inflammasome axis may be a rational molecular target for the treatment of aged-related arrhythmia disease.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1093/cvr/cvab114
Canonical
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2026-06-13 MST

Cite this

APA
Zhang, Y., Zhang, S., Li, B., Luo, Y., Gong, Y., Jin, X., Zhang, J., Zhou, Y., Zhuo, X., Wang, Z., Zhao, X., Han, X., Gao, Y., Yu, H., Liang, D., Zhao, S., Sun, D., Wang, D., Xu, W., &amp; Qu, G. (2021). Gut microbiota dysbiosis promotes age-related atrial fibrillation by lipopolysaccharide and glucose-induced activation of NLRP3-inflammasome. <em>Cardiovascular Research</em>. https://doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvab114
Vancouver
Zhang Y, Zhang S, Li B, Luo Y, Gong Y, Jin X, et al. Gut microbiota dysbiosis promotes age-related atrial fibrillation by lipopolysaccharide and glucose-induced activation of NLRP3-inflammasome. Cardiovascular Research. 2021. doi:10.1093/cvr/cvab114.
BibTeX
@article{yun2021Gutmic, title = {Gut microbiota dysbiosis promotes age-related atrial fibrillation by lipopolysaccharide and glucose-induced activation of NLRP3-inflammasome}, author = {Yun Zhang and Song Zhang and Bolin Li and Yingchun Luo and Yongtai Gong and Xuexin Jin and Jiawei Zhang and Yun Zhou and Xiaozhen Zhuo and Zixi Wang and Xinbo Zhao and Xuejie Han and Yunlong Gao and Hui Yu and Desen Liang and Shiqi Zhao and Danghui Sun and Dingyu Wang and Wei Xu and Guangjin Qu and BO Wan-lan and Dan Li and Yue Wu and Yue Li}, journal = {Cardiovascular Research}, year = {2021}, doi = {10.1093/cvr/cvab114}, }

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