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Faecal virome transplantation decreases symptoms of type 2 diabetes and obesity in a murine model

Faecal virome transplantation decreases symptoms of type 2 diabetes and obesity in a murine model
Faecal virome transplantation decreases symptoms of type 2 diabetes and obesity in a murine model

OBJECTIVE: Development of obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D) are associated with gut microbiota (GM) changes. The gut viral community is predominated by bacteriophages (phages), which are viruses that attack bacteria in a host-specific manner. The antagonistic behaviour of phages has the potential to alter the GM. As a proof-of-concept, we demonstrate the efficacy of faecal virome transplantation (FVT) from lean donors for shifting the phenotype of obese mice into closer resemblance of lean mice.

DESIGN: The FVT consisted of viromes with distinct profiles extracted from the caecal content of mice from different vendors that were fed a low-fat (LF) diet for 14 weeks. Male C57BL/6NTac mice were divided into five groups: LF (as diet control), high-fat (HF) diet, HF+ampicillin (Amp), HF+Amp+FVT and HF+FVT. At weeks 6 and 7 of the study, the HF+FVT and HF+Amp+FVT mice were treated with FVT by oral gavage. The Amp groups were treated with Amp 24 hours prior to first FVT treatment.

RESULTS: Six weeks after first FVT, the HF+FVT mice showed a significant decrease in weight gain compared with the HF group. Further, glucose tolerance was comparable between the LF and HF+FVT mice, while the other HF groups all had impaired glucose tolerance. These observations were supported by significant shifts in GM composition, blood plasma metabolome and expression levels of genes associated with obesity and T2D development.

CONCLUSIONS: Transfer of caecal viral communities from mice with a lean phenotype into mice with an obese phenotype led to reduced weight gain and normalised blood glucose parameters relative to lean mice. We hypothesise that this effect is mediated via FVT-induced GM changes.

diabetes mellitus, gut differentiation, intestinal microbiology, obesity
1468-3288
2122-2130
Rasmussen, Torben Sølbeck
5b95535b-d4e8-4a7a-b2a7-eadc3349c5f9
Mentzel, Caroline Märta Junker
c76312dc-0889-477e-8d97-a4ec69db0615
Kot, Witold
786d9027-1e49-41d9-be46-e38d73cd4597
Castro-Mejía, Josué Leonardo
ec6f1cf2-99fe-4901-8ef2-e0ae78fd649f
Zuffa, Simone
b28a5497-fdbd-4081-84b6-b2d2bc41cfbb
Swann, Jonathan Richard
7c11a66b-f4b8-4dbf-aa17-ad8b0561b85c
Hansen, Lars Hestbjerg
89c9a3bd-a344-4be5-8bc6-e582b93de47e
Vogensen, Finn Kvist
ad74c13d-13e3-407a-ba79-c08cbc496e85
Hansen, Axel Kornerup
0ac7a29b-9e6c-4266-8e8c-51edf21c5903
Nielsen, Dennis Sandris
fb7e83e3-3c65-473f-9d19-dab0da56884c
Rasmussen, Torben Sølbeck
5b95535b-d4e8-4a7a-b2a7-eadc3349c5f9
Mentzel, Caroline Märta Junker
c76312dc-0889-477e-8d97-a4ec69db0615
Kot, Witold
786d9027-1e49-41d9-be46-e38d73cd4597
Castro-Mejía, Josué Leonardo
ec6f1cf2-99fe-4901-8ef2-e0ae78fd649f
Zuffa, Simone
b28a5497-fdbd-4081-84b6-b2d2bc41cfbb
Swann, Jonathan Richard
7c11a66b-f4b8-4dbf-aa17-ad8b0561b85c
Hansen, Lars Hestbjerg
89c9a3bd-a344-4be5-8bc6-e582b93de47e
Vogensen, Finn Kvist
ad74c13d-13e3-407a-ba79-c08cbc496e85
Hansen, Axel Kornerup
0ac7a29b-9e6c-4266-8e8c-51edf21c5903
Nielsen, Dennis Sandris
fb7e83e3-3c65-473f-9d19-dab0da56884c

Rasmussen, Torben Sølbeck, Mentzel, Caroline Märta Junker, Kot, Witold, Castro-Mejía, Josué Leonardo, Zuffa, Simone, Swann, Jonathan Richard, Hansen, Lars Hestbjerg, Vogensen, Finn Kvist, Hansen, Axel Kornerup and Nielsen, Dennis Sandris (2020) Faecal virome transplantation decreases symptoms of type 2 diabetes and obesity in a murine model. Gut, 69 (12), 2122-2130. (doi:10.1136/gutjnl-2019-320005).

Record type: Article

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Development of obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D) are associated with gut microbiota (GM) changes. The gut viral community is predominated by bacteriophages (phages), which are viruses that attack bacteria in a host-specific manner. The antagonistic behaviour of phages has the potential to alter the GM. As a proof-of-concept, we demonstrate the efficacy of faecal virome transplantation (FVT) from lean donors for shifting the phenotype of obese mice into closer resemblance of lean mice.

DESIGN: The FVT consisted of viromes with distinct profiles extracted from the caecal content of mice from different vendors that were fed a low-fat (LF) diet for 14 weeks. Male C57BL/6NTac mice were divided into five groups: LF (as diet control), high-fat (HF) diet, HF+ampicillin (Amp), HF+Amp+FVT and HF+FVT. At weeks 6 and 7 of the study, the HF+FVT and HF+Amp+FVT mice were treated with FVT by oral gavage. The Amp groups were treated with Amp 24 hours prior to first FVT treatment.

RESULTS: Six weeks after first FVT, the HF+FVT mice showed a significant decrease in weight gain compared with the HF group. Further, glucose tolerance was comparable between the LF and HF+FVT mice, while the other HF groups all had impaired glucose tolerance. These observations were supported by significant shifts in GM composition, blood plasma metabolome and expression levels of genes associated with obesity and T2D development.

CONCLUSIONS: Transfer of caecal viral communities from mice with a lean phenotype into mice with an obese phenotype led to reduced weight gain and normalised blood glucose parameters relative to lean mice. We hypothesise that this effect is mediated via FVT-induced GM changes.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 21 February 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 March 2020
Published date: 1 December 2020
Keywords: diabetes mellitus, gut differentiation, intestinal microbiology, obesity

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 440499
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/440499
ISSN: 1468-3288
PURE UUID: 8018779e-87aa-4957-b673-9b9cc984a34f
ORCID for Jonathan Richard Swann: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6485-4529

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 05 May 2020 16:42
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:00

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Contributors

Author: Torben Sølbeck Rasmussen
Author: Caroline Märta Junker Mentzel
Author: Witold Kot
Author: Josué Leonardo Castro-Mejía
Author: Simone Zuffa
Author: Lars Hestbjerg Hansen
Author: Finn Kvist Vogensen
Author: Axel Kornerup Hansen
Author: Dennis Sandris Nielsen

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