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The Gut Microbiome Contributes to a Substantial Proportion of the Variation in Blood Lipids

Jingyuan Fu, Marc Jan Bonder, María Carmen Cénit, Ettje F. Tigchelaar, Astrid Maatman, Jackie Dekens, Eelke Brandsma, Joanna Marczynska, Floris Imhann, Rinse K. Weersma, Lude Franke, Tiffany Poon, Ramnik J. Xavier, Dirk Gevers, Marten H. Hofker

Circulation Research · 2015 · ▲ 784 citations

Abstract

RATIONALE: Evidence suggests that the gut microbiome is involved in the development of cardiovascular disease, with the host-microbe interaction regulating immune and metabolic pathways. However, there was no firm evidence for associations between microbiota and metabolic risk factors for cardiovascular disease from large-scale studies in humans. In particular, there was no strong evidence for association between cardiovascular disease and aberrant blood lipid levels. OBJECTIVES: To identify intestinal bacteria taxa, whose proportions correlate with body mass index and lipid levels, and to determine whether lipid variance can be explained by microbiota relative to age, sex, and host genetics. METHODS AND RESULTS: We studied 893 subjects from the Life-Lines-DEEP population cohort. After correcting for age and sex, we identified 34 bacterial taxa associated with body mass index and blood lipids; most are novel associations. Cross-validation analysis revealed that microbiota explain 4.5% of the variance in body mass index, 6% in triglycerides, and 4% in high-density lipoproteins, independent of age, sex, and genetic risk factors. A novel risk model, including the gut microbiome explained ≤ 25.9% of high-density lipoprotein variance, significantly outperforming the risk model without microbiome. Strikingly, the microbiome had little effect on low-density lipoproteins or total cholesterol. CONCLUSIONS: Our studies suggest that the gut microbiome may play an important role in the variation in body mass index and blood lipid levels, independent of age, sex, and host genetics. Our findings support the potential of therapies altering the gut microbiome to control body mass, triglycerides, and high-density lipoproteins.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1161/circresaha.115.306807
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2026-06-12 MST

Cite this

APA
Fu, J., Bonder, M.J., Cénit, M.C., Tigchelaar, E.F., Maatman, A., Dekens, J., Brandsma, E., Marczynska, J., Imhann, F., Weersma, R.K., Franke, L., Poon, T., Xavier, R.J., Gevers, D., Hofker, M.H., Wijmenga, C., &amp; Zhernakova, A. (2015). The Gut Microbiome Contributes to a Substantial Proportion of the Variation in Blood Lipids. <em>Circulation Research</em>. https://doi.org/10.1161/circresaha.115.306807
Vancouver
Fu J, Bonder MJ, Cénit MC, Tigchelaar EF, Maatman A, Dekens J, et al. The Gut Microbiome Contributes to a Substantial Proportion of the Variation in Blood Lipids. Circulation Research. 2015. doi:10.1161/circresaha.115.306807.
BibTeX
@unpublished{jingyuan2015TheGut, title = {The Gut Microbiome Contributes to a Substantial Proportion of the Variation in Blood Lipids}, author = {Jingyuan Fu and Marc Jan Bonder and María Carmen Cénit and Ettje F. Tigchelaar and Astrid Maatman and Jackie Dekens and Eelke Brandsma and Joanna Marczynska and Floris Imhann and Rinse K. Weersma and Lude Franke and Tiffany Poon and Ramnik J. Xavier and Dirk Gevers and Marten H. Hofker and Cisca Wijmenga and Alexandra Zhernakova}, journal = {Circulation Research}, year = {2015}, doi = {10.1161/circresaha.115.306807}, }

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