Using the Microbiome to Treat Disease
Hello. I am Dr David Johnson, professor of medicine and chief of gastroenterology at Eastern Virginia Medical School in Norfolk, Virginia.
Dietary Influence on the Microbiome
It is well known that the gut serves as the largest immune system in the body. Recent research, however, has extended our understanding to the crosslink between gut immunogenicity and the host microbiome, as well as the subsequent effect this may have on a broader range of disease activities. The focus of this talk is on how exactly existing diet and potential modifications to it may influence these effects.
Risk for Cancer
When considering the models where the microbiome may have a more prominent role than previously thought, the first area that comes to mind is cancer.
GI Cancers
The majority of our microbiome's diversity resides in the colon. A recent study has linked certain pathogenic bacteria with the development of colorectal cancer.[5] The current thought is that selected microbiomes can mediate a chronic inflammatory environment, which contributes to the progression of colorectal cancer.
The incidence of cancer in rural native Africans is lower compared with African Americans, something that has been attributed to a higher amount of indigestible polysaccharides in the diet of the former.[5] The role of diet in the adenoma-carcinoma sequence is therefore of particular interest. Undigested polysaccharides passing into the gut, primarily as dietary fiber, are metabolized by the microbiome into short-chain fatty acids. These are then converted into acetate, propionate, and butyrate, the latter two of which inhibit intracellular histone deacetylases. These in turn down regulate the proinflammatory cytokines (interleukin [IL] 6 and 12, in particular) and induce differentiation of T cells into regulatory T cells. In total, this process leads to a decrease in the inflammatory mediators in the colon.[5]
An individual's diet and unique microbiome are therefore thought to influence the proinflammatory state of the colon via both immunologic and metabolite-mediated mechanisms, potentially contributing to the progression of the adenoma-carcinoma sequence in colon cancer. This underlines the importance of fiber for colon cancer prevention.
Conversely, a high-fat diet has been shown to promote small-bowel cancers. In a study[6] where mice were given a high-fat diet, researchers were able to demonstrate an acceleration to small-bowel cancer in the KRAS expression mouse model. Further analysis[6] showed that performing a fecal transplant from the KRAS high-fat diet mice into healthy KRAS mice induced the latter to develop small-bowel cancer. Importantly, the researchers could decrease the cancer risk in these mice by transforming the microbiome through the use of antibiotics.
Breast Cancer
Diet and microbiome are also postulated to influence the course of breast cancer, which 1 out of 7 women in the United States are at risk of developing. It is thought that this disease develops through bacterial-mediated metabolism of estrogen and the microbiome-dependent maturation of T cells. There is an abundance of short-chain fatty acids in the high-fiber diet that increase a number of helpful bacteria (eg, Bacteroides) in the gut microbiome. These microbiomes metabolize ligands in the diet into potent phytoestrogens that have been shown to inversely affect the risk for breast cancer.[7]
In contrast, estrogen is a major hormonal growth promoter of breast cancer that is conjugated in the liver and secreted in the bile. The microbiome, however, is capable of deconjugating this estrogen and increasing its reabsorption. Once again, evidence shows that breast cancer risk may be diminished with a high-fiber, low-fat diet.[7]
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
There has been a growing focus on the impact that dietary influences can have on inflammatory bowel disease, although the causal relationship remains somewhat unclear.
Transmissible Obesity
These findings are also applicable to metabolic syndrome and the obesity epidemic.
The Real Risk of Artificial Sweeteners
Interesting data[14] also exist that are challenging our understanding of the use of artificial sweeteners. Findings indicate that artificial sweeteners can actually induce glucose intolerance via alterations in the gut microbiome, an observation that has been shown now in both mice and humans. In non-genetically altered mice, both lean and high-fat diet groups develop marked glucose intolerance compared with controls after consuming a variety of artificial sweeteners. Once again, treatment with antibiotics eliminated this, thereby fulfilling the postulate of causality and reversal by antibiotics.
A notable shift in the microbiome has been observed here, particularly via an overrepresentation of Bacteroides species. Therefore, using artificial sweeteners in patients with a proclivity toward diabetes or actual diabetes as an adjunct to decrease glucose absorption may be paradoxical, given the risk that we can adversely affect the gut microbiome.
Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
Targeted manipulation of the microbiome has also shown promise for nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. A variety of things present in the gut are associated with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. Certain diet inductions of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease have been evident, most notably methacholine- and choline-deficient diets. These too are reversible when mice are given antibiotics, providing more evidence that upregulation of cytokines may be induced by certain diets.[15] Low-fat diets have proven to have a particularly positive effect in this population, which has led me to recommend them to my patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, alongside weight loss and diabetic control.
Improving Artery Health
The traditional high-fat, low-fiber Western diet has been linked to multiple inflammatory diseases outside the GI tract, and is well known to be a significant risk factor for atherosclerosis. Several findings have identified this association.
Phosphorylcholine metabolites produced by the gut microbiome promote cardiovascular disease. Foods rich in phosphorylcholine include eggs, milk, liver, red meat, poultry, fish, and shellfish. There are also identifiable links to subsequently exposed myocardial infarction patients and the presence of a significant risk factor called trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO). Phosphorylcholine is converted to trimethylamine (TMA) by the gut microflora, which is then metabolized to TMAO. This is present as an indirect biomarker in patients with cardiovascular disease, with TMAO activation shown to decrease after treatment with antibiotics in human patients.
When compared with a Western diet, a Mediterranean diet, which is particularly low in red meat consumption, is known to decrease the risk for cardiovascular disease. The gut flora metabolism of L-carnitine, an abundant nutrient in red meat, produced TMAO-accelerated atherosclerosis in both mice and humans. This establishes L-carnitine as a type of TMA that is also converted to TMAO by the gut microbiome. This is increased by what we see as an expression of certain bacteria in the gut. With regard to atherosclerosis, there is a strong rationale for pushing patients toward the Mediterranean diet, low in the production of TMAOs.
Asthma and Allergies
In the past several decades, there has been a dramatic increase in chronic inflammatory diseases, such as asthma and allergies. The association between asthma and the potential for gut immunoregulation is particularly striking.
Challenging Modern Treatment Concepts
What I have sought to do with this presentation is not to provide you with simple answers, but rather to encourage you to look at diet and its influence on the gut microbiome in an out-of-the-box fashion. The diseases I've mentioned here are very commonly treated with medications. However, we need to also start considering diet as a potential adjunctive, if not primary, treatment for many of these diseases. This would take us beyond statins for atherosclerotic patients or tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors for our IBD patients, and provide us with more comprehensive possibilities in the way that we look at these disease states.
I hope this has opened up the door for additional questions. If you are a patient, I recommend that you ask your doctor about these issues. If you are a doctor or a healthcare provider, I recommend you take a deeper look at the data and the suggested reading provided.
I am Dr David Johnson. Thanks again for listening. See you next time for another GI Common Concerns—Computer Consult .
Suggested Reading
Ardeshir A, Narayan NR, Méndez-Lagares G, et al. Breast-fed and bottle-fed infant rhesus macaques develop distinct gut microbiotas and immune systems. Sci Transl Med. 2014;6:252ra120.
Koeth RA, Wang Z, Levison BS, et al. Intestinal microbiota metabolism of L-carnitine, a nutrient in red meat, promotes atherosclerosis. Nat Med. 2013;19:576-585.
Tang WH, Wang Z, Levison BS, et al. Intestinal microbial metabolism of phosphatidylcholine and cardiovascular risk. N Engl J Med. 2013;368:1575-1584.
Thorburn AN, Macia L, Mackay CR. Diet, metabolites, and "western-lifestyle" inflammatory diseases. Immunity. 2014;40:833-842.
Tilg H, Moschen AR. Food, immunity, and the microbiome. Gastroenterology. 2015;148:1107-1119.
Trompette A, Gollwitzer ES, Yadava K, et al. Gut microbiota metabolism of dietary fiber influences allergic airway disease and hematopoiesis. Nat Med. 2014;20:159-166.
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Cite this: The Wide-Ranging Role of the Microbiome - Medscape - Sep 15, 2015.
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