Skip to content

Therapeutic applications of gut microbes in cardiometabolic diseases: current state and perspectives

Lin Yuan, Ying Li, Moutong Chen, Liang Xue, Juan Wang, Yu Ding, Qihui Gu, Jumei Zhang, Hui Zhao, Xinqiang Xie, Qingping Wu
Key takeaways
  1. 01Examine the complex interactions between gut microbes, metabolites, and cardiometabolic disease progression
  2. 02Acknowledge that dietary supplements and probiotics currently lack robust clinical evidence for CMD
  3. 03Investigate emerging technologies like fecal microbiota transplantation and nanomedicine as potential treatments
  4. 04Focus on identifying specific microbial markers to enable personalized prevention and therapy

Gut microbes significantly influence cardiometabolic health, though clinical evidence for current probiotic treatments remains limited.

Abstract

Cardiometabolic disease (CMD) encompasses a range of diseases such as hypertension, atherosclerosis, heart failure, obesity, and type 2 diabetes. Recent findings about CMD's interaction with gut microbiota have broadened our understanding of how diet and nutrition drive microbes to influence CMD. However, the translation of basic research into the clinic has not been smooth, and dietary nutrition and probiotic supplementation have yet to show significant evidence of the therapeutic benefits of CMD. In addition, the published reviews do not suggest the core microbiota or metabolite classes that influence CMD, and systematically elucidate the causal relationship between host disease phenotypes-microbiome. The aim of this review is to highlight the complex interaction of the gut microbiota and their metabolites with CMD progression and to further centralize and conceptualize the mechanisms of action between microbial and host disease phenotypes. We also discuss the potential of targeting modulations of gut microbes and metabolites as new targets for prevention and treatment of CMD, including the use of emerging technologies such as fecal microbiota transplantation and nanomedicine. KEY POINTS: • To highlight the complex interaction of the gut microbiota and their metabolites with CMD progression and to further centralize and conceptualize the mechanisms of action between microbial and host disease phenotypes. • We also discuss the potential of targeting modulations of gut microbes and metabolites as new targets for prevention and treatment of CMD, including the use of emerging technologies such as FMT and nanomedicine. • Our study provides insight into identification-specific microbiomes and metabolites involved in CMD, and microbial-host changes and physiological factors as disease phenotypes develop, which will help to map the microbiome individually and capture pathogenic mechanisms as a whole.

Cite this study
APA
Lin Yuan, Ying Li, Moutong Chen, Liang Xue, Juan Wang, Yu Ding, Qihui Gu, Jumei Zhang, Hui Zhao, Xinqiang Xie, & Qingping Wu (2024). Therapeutic applications of gut microbes in cardiometabolic diseases: current state and perspectives.
MLA
Lin Yuan, et al. "Therapeutic applications of gut microbes in cardiometabolic diseases: current state and perspectives." 2024.
Chicago
Lin Yuan et al. 2024. "Therapeutic applications of gut microbes in cardiometabolic diseases: current state and perspectives."