Poroyko, Valeriy A.
Carreras, Alba
Khalyfa, Abdelnaby
Khalyfa, Ahamed A.
Leone, Vanessa
Peris, Eduard
Almendros López, Isaac
Gileles-Hillel, Alex
Qiao, Zhuanhong
Hubert, Nathaniel
Farré Ventura, Ramon
Chang, Eugene B.
Gozal, David
2017-05-29T15:08:57Z
2017-05-29T15:08:57Z
2016-10-14
2017-05-29T15:08:57Z
Chronic sleep fragmentation (SF) commonly occurs in human populations, and although it does not involve circadian shifts or sleep deprivation, it markedly alters feeding behaviors ultimately promoting obesity and insulin resistance. These symptoms are known to be related to the host gut microbiota. Mice were exposed to SF for 4 weeks and then allowed to recover for 2 weeks. Taxonomic profiles of fecal microbiota were obtained prospectively, and conventionalization experiments were performed in germ-free mice. Adipose tissue insulin sensitivity and inflammation, as well as circulating measures of inflammation, were assayed. Effect of fecal water on colonic epithelial permeability was also examined. Chronic SF-induced increased food intake and reversible gut microbiota changes characterized by the preferential growth of highly fermentative members of Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcaceae and a decrease of Lactobacillaceae families. These lead to systemic and visceral white adipose tissue inflammation in addition to altered insulin sensitivity in mice, most likely via enhanced colonic epithelium barrier disruption. Conventionalization of germ-free mice with SF-derived microbiota confirmed these findings. Thus, SF-induced metabolic alterations may be mediated, in part, by concurrent changes in gut microbiota, thereby opening the way for gut microbiome-targeted therapeutics aimed at reducing the major end-organ morbidities of chronic SF.
English
Microbiologia mèdica; Microbiota; Obesitat; Trastorns del son; Medical microbiology; Microbiota; Obesity; Sleep disorders
Nature Publishing Group
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep35405
Scientific Reports, 2016, vol. 6, p. 35405
https://doi.org/10.1038/srep35405
cc-by (c) Poroyko, Valeriy A. et al., 2016
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es