AI Article Synopsis

  • The polyphenol xanthohumol (XN) improves glucose and lipid metabolism in animals with diet-induced obesity, and its effects are believed to depend on the gut microbiota.
  • A study tested XN on conventional and germ-free mice with different diets, revealing that XN reduces insulin levels and improves insulin resistance in conventional mice but has no effect in germ-free mice.
  • XN alters gut microbiota composition and is metabolized into bioactive compounds, indicating that the intestinal microbiota plays a crucial role in XN's benefits, prompting further research into its complex interactions with diet and host.

Article Abstract

Scope: The polyphenol xanthohumol (XN) improves dysfunctional glucose and lipid metabolism in diet-induced obesity animal models. Because XN changes intestinal microbiota composition, the study hypothesizes that XN requires the microbiota to mediate its benefits.

Methods And Results: To test the hypothesis, the study feeds conventional and germ-free male Swiss Webster mice either a low-fat diet (LFD, 10% fat derived calories), a high-fat diet (HFD, 60% fat derived calories), or a high-fat diet supplemented with XN at 60 mg kg body weight per day (HXN) for 10 weeks, and measure parameters of glucose and lipid metabolism. In conventional mice, the study discovers XN supplementation decreases plasma insulin concentrations and improves Homeostatic Model Assessment of Insulin Resistance (HOMA-IR). In germ-free mice, XN supplementation fails to improve these outcomes. Fecal sample 16S rRNA gene sequencing analysis suggests XN supplementation changes microbial composition and dramatically alters the predicted functional capacity of the intestinal microbiota. Furthermore, the intestinal microbiota metabolizes XN into bioactive compounds, including dihydroxanthohumol (DXN), an anti-obesogenic compound with improved bioavailability.

Conclusion: XN requires the intestinal microbiota to mediate its benefits, which involves complex diet-host-microbiota interactions with changes in both microbial composition and functional capacity. The study results warrant future metagenomic studies which will provide insight into complex microbe-microbe interactions and diet-host-microbiota interactions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8571065PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mnfr.202100389DOI Listing

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