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Gut microbiota, short chain fatty acids, and obesity across the epidemiologic transition: the METS-Microbiome study protocol

机译:肠道微生物群,短链脂肪酸,以及流行病学过渡的肥胖症:Mets-Microbiome研究方案

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While some of the variance observed in adiposity and weight change within populations can be accounted for by traditional risk factors, a new factor, the gut microbiota, has recently been associated with obesity. However, the causal mechanisms through which the gut microbiota and its metabolites, short chain fatty acids (SCFAs) influence obesity are unknown, as are the individual obesogenic effects of the individual SCFAs (butyrate, acetate and propionate). This study, METS-Microbiome, proposes to examine the influence of novel risk factors, the gut microbiota and SCFAs, on obesity, adiposity and weight change in an international established cohort spanning the epidemiologic transition. The parent study; Modeling the Epidemiologic Transition Study (METS) is a well-established and ongoing prospective cohort study designed to assess the association between body composition, physical activity, and relative weight, weight gain and cardiometabolic disease risk in five diverse population-based samples in 2500 people of African descent. The cohort has been prospectively followed since 2009. Annual measures of obesity risk factors, including body composition, objectively measured physical activity and dietary intake, components which vary across the spectrum of social and economic development. In our new study; METS-Microbiome, in addition to continuing yearly measures of obesity risk, we will also measure gut microbiota and stool SCFAs in all contactable participants, and follow participants for a further 3?years, thus providing one of the largest gut microbiota population-based studies to date. This new study capitalizes upon an existing, extensively well described cohort of adults of African-origin, with significant variability as a result of the widespread geographic distributions, and therefore variation in the environmental covariate exposures. The METS-Microbiome study will substantially advance the understanding of the role gut microbiota and SCFAs play in the development of obesity and provide novel obesity therapeutic targets targeting SCFAs producing features of the gut microbiota. Registered NCT03378765 Date first posted: December 20, 2017.
机译:虽然在肥胖症和体重变化中观察到的一些方差可以通过传统风险因素来占,但最近与肥胖有关的新因素。然而,肠道微生物群及其代谢物,短链脂肪酸(SCFA)影响肥胖的因果机制是未知的,因此单个SCFA(丁酸盐,乙酸酯和丙酸盐)的个体含量萎缩作用也是如此。本研究,Mets-Microbiome,建议审查新的危险因素,肠道微生物群和SCFA的影响,肥胖,肥胖,体重变化,跨越流行病学转变的国际成立的队列。父母研究;模拟流行病学过渡研究(METS)是一项完善和持续的前瞻性队列研究,旨在评估在2500人中五种不同人群的样本中的身体成分,体育活动和相对体重,体重增加和心肌素质疾病风险之间的关联非洲人血统。自2009年以来,队列已被前瞻性遵循。肥胖危险因素的年度衡量标准因素,包括身体成分,客观地测量的身体活动和饮食摄入量,各组件在社会和经济发展的范围内各不相同。在我们的新学习中; Mets-Microbiome,除了继续肥胖风险的年度衡量标准外,我们还将在所有可接受的参与者中测量肠道微生物群和凳子SCFA,并遵循参与者进一步3年的时间,从而提供最大的肠道微生物群人群群体的研究迄今为止。这项新的研究资本化了非洲原产地的成年人队列的现有,广泛良好的,由于广泛的地理分布,因此具有显着的变化,因此在环境变异性暴露中的变化。 Met-Microbiome的研究将大大提高对肥胖症发展的角色微生物群和SCFA的理解,并提供针对肠道微生物肠的SCFA的特征的新型肥胖治疗靶标。注册NCT03378765首次发布日期:2017年12月20日。

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