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Age-dependent association of gut bacteria with coronary atherosclerosis: Tampere Sudden Death Study
Age-dependent association of gut bacteria with coronary atherosclerosis: Tampere Sudden Death Study
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Age-dependent association of gut bacteria with coronary atherosclerosis: Tampere Sudden Death Study
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Age-dependent association of gut bacteria with coronary atherosclerosis: Tampere Sudden Death Study
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Age-dependent association of gut bacteria with coronary atherosclerosis: Tampere Sudden Death Study
Age-dependent association of gut bacteria with coronary atherosclerosis: Tampere Sudden Death Study
Journal Article

Age-dependent association of gut bacteria with coronary atherosclerosis: Tampere Sudden Death Study

2019
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Overview
The gut microbiome is thought to remain stable into old age. Gut bacteria and their translocation may play a role in the development of coronary heart disease (CHD) by modulating cholesterol levels and immune responses, as well as by producing toxic metabolites and bacterial endotoxins. The association of changes in the gut microbiome with the severity of coronary atherosclerosis and the ability of gut bacteria themselves to translocate into coronary plaques has not been studied. As a part of the Tampere Sudden Death Study, we measured age-dependent changes in the relative ratios of major intestinal bacterial communities (Bacteroides species [spp.], the Clostridium leptum group, the Clostridium coccoides group, Bifidobacterium spp., Enterobactericeae, Lactobacillus spp.) and Streptococcus spp. in both feces and coronary plaques of the same male autopsy cases (n = 67, age range 44-95) using real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR). The area of coronary atherosclerotic lesions were measured by computer-assisted morphometry. Fecal bacterial DNA measurements from healthy volunteers served as a control for gut bacterial analyses of autopsy cases. The relative amount of bacterial DNA in a sample was determined with the comparative Cq method. The relative ratios of fecal Lactobacillus spp., Bifidobacterium spp., the Clostridium coccoides group, and Bacteroides spp. did not differ between controls and autopsy cases and showed no age-dependence. In contrast, the ratios of the Clostridium leptum group, Enterobactericeae, and Streptococcus spp. increased with age. Elevated relative ratios of fecal Enterobactericeae associated with a larger coronary plaque fibrotic area (p = 0.001), and the Clostridium leptum group with a larger calcification area (p = 0.015). Intestinal bacterial DNA could be amplified in 67.6% of the coronary plaques, the most common being Streptococcus spp. (41.0%), followed by Enterobactericeae (12.1%), Clostridium leptum (2.4%), and Lactobacillus spp. (2.4%). The percentages of Streptococcus spp. DNA decreased, and those of Enterobactericeae increased in coronary plaques along with age. DNA of the Clostridium leptum group and pathogenic Enterobactericeae increase in the gut microbiome with age and can be detected in the same individual's coronary plaques along with pathogenic Streptococcus spp., associating with more severe coronary atherosclerosis.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject

Adult

/ Age

/ Age (Biology)

/ Age Factors

/ Aged

/ Aged, 80 and over

/ Analysis

/ Arteriosclerosis

/ Atherosclerosis

/ Atherosclerosis - complications

/ Atherosclerosis - microbiology

/ Atherosclerosis - mortality

/ Atherosclerosis - pathology

/ Autopsies

/ Autopsy

/ Bacteria

/ Bacterial genetics

/ Bacterial infections

/ Bacterial Translocation

/ Bacterial Typing Techniques

/ Bacteroides

/ Bacteroides - classification

/ Bacteroides - genetics

/ Bacteroides - isolation & purification

/ Bifidobacterium

/ Bifidobacterium - classification

/ Bifidobacterium - genetics

/ Bifidobacterium - isolation & purification

/ Biology and Life Sciences

/ Blood clots

/ Calcification

/ Calcification (ectopic)

/ Calcification (Physiology)

/ Cardiovascular disease

/ Cardiovascular diseases

/ Case-Control Studies

/ Cholesterol

/ Clostridiales - classification

/ Clostridiales - genetics

/ Clostridiales - isolation & purification

/ Clostridium

/ Clostridium - classification

/ Clostridium - genetics

/ Clostridium - isolation & purification

/ Coronary artery disease

/ Coronary Artery Disease - complications

/ Coronary Artery Disease - microbiology

/ Coronary Artery Disease - mortality

/ Coronary Artery Disease - pathology

/ Coronary heart disease

/ Death

/ Death, Sudden - etiology

/ Death, Sudden - pathology

/ Deoxyribonucleic acid

/ Dependence

/ Development and progression

/ Digestive system

/ Digestive tract

/ DNA

/ DNA, Bacterial - genetics

/ Endotoxins

/ Enterobacteriaceae - classification

/ Enterobacteriaceae - genetics

/ Enterobacteriaceae - isolation & purification

/ Feces - microbiology

/ Fibrosis

/ Gastrointestinal Microbiome - genetics

/ Gastrointestinal tract

/ Gene expression

/ Genetic research

/ Heart diseases

/ Hospitals

/ Humans

/ Immune response

/ Immune system

/ Infections

/ Inflammation

/ Intestinal microflora

/ Intestine

/ Laboratories

/ Lactobacillus

/ Lactobacillus - classification

/ Lactobacillus - genetics

/ Lactobacillus - isolation & purification

/ Lesions

/ Male

/ Medicine

/ Medicine and Health Sciences

/ Metabolism

/ Metabolites

/ Microbiomes

/ Microbiota

/ Microbiota (Symbiotic organisms)

/ Middle Aged

/ Morphometry

/ Plaque, Atherosclerotic - complications

/ Plaque, Atherosclerotic - microbiology

/ Plaque, Atherosclerotic - mortality

/ Plaque, Atherosclerotic - pathology

/ Plaques

/ Polymerase chain reaction

/ Severity of Illness Index

/ Streptococcus

/ Streptococcus - classification

/ Streptococcus - genetics

/ Streptococcus - isolation & purification

/ Translocation