Heart disease: Certain type of gut bacteria may help lower risk

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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Scientists have linked specific gut bacteria to reduce heart disease risk. Design by MNT; Photography by Hernandez & Sorokina/Stocksy & STEVE GSCHMEISSNER/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY/Getty Images
  • Scientists have discovered that gut microbes play a significant role in influencing cardiovascular disease.
  • This builds upon previous research linking the gut microbiota to various health issues like diabetes and obesity.
  • Using data from the Framingham Heart Study, researchers identified specific bacteria in the gut that can break down cholesterol, suggesting a potential path to reducing heart disease risk.
  • This research not only sheds light on the mechanisms by which gut bacteria affect cholesterol levels but also opens the door for treatments aimed at modifying the gut microbiota to improve heart health.

Alterations in the gut microbiota have been linked to several illnesses, such as type 2 diabetes, obesity, and inflammatory bowel disease.

Researchers from the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard in collaboration with Massachusetts General Hospital have recently discovered that gut microbes could also influence cardiovascular disease.

The new study, published in Cell, highlights particular bacterial species in the gut that digest cholesterol, potentially reducing cholesterol levels and the risk of heart disease in individuals.

The researchers examined metabolites and microbial genomes from over 1,400 participants in the long-running Framingham Heart Study, which investigates cardiovascular disease risk factors.

They found that a type of bacteria called Oscillibacter absorbs and processes cholesterol from its environment, noting that individuals with higher quantities of this microbe in their intestines exhibited reduced cholesterol levels.

The team also uncovered the process these bacteria likely employ to degrade cholesterol.

The findings imply that future interventions targeting the microbiota in specific manners may aid in lowering cholesterol levels in humans.

These discoveries provide a foundation for more focused research on the impact of microbiome alterations on Health and disease.

The method revealed over 16,000 links between microbes and metabolic characteristics, with one particularly notable finding: individuals hosting several species of bacteria from the Oscillibacter genus exhibited lower cholesterol levels compared to those without these bacteria.

Remarkably, Oscillibacter species were found to be quite prevalent in the gut, averaging about one in every 100 bacteria.

To understand how these microbes metabolize cholesterol, the researchers aimed to identify the biochemical pathway involved, which involved cultivating the organism in a laboratory setting.

Luckily, the laboratory had devoted years to collecting bacteria from stool samples, building a unique collection that includes Oscillibacter species.

After the researchers successfully cultivated the bacteria in the lab, they used mass spectrometry to pinpoint the likely byproducts created when the bacteria process cholesterol.

This helped them understand the methods these bacteria use to reduce cholesterol levels.

They discovered that the bacteria transform cholesterol into substances that other bacteria can further break down and the body can then eliminate.

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