AI Article Synopsis

  • The gut microbiome plays a role in preventing hypertension, but the effect of gut bacteriophages on this condition is not well understood.
  • Research involving angiotensin II-hypertensive mice found that both bacterial and viral populations in the gut remained stable regardless of hypertension status, with more temperate than virulent viruses present.
  • High-fiber diets were shown to lower blood pressure and promote beneficial changes in the gut microbiome, indicating a complex relationship between diet, bacteria, and phages in regulating blood pressure.

Article Abstract

The gut microbiome is an emerging factor in preventing hypertension, yet the influence of gut bacteriophages, viruses infecting bacteria, on this condition remains unclear. Bacteriophage-bacteria interactions, which impact the gut microbiome, are influenced differentially by temperate and virulent bacteriophages. However, the standard technique for studying viral populations, viral-like particles (VLPs)-metagenomes, often overlook prophages, the intracellular stage of temperate bacteriophages, creating a knowledge gap. To address this, we investigated alterations in extracellular and intracellular bacteriophages, alongside bacterial populations, in the angiotensin II-hypertension model. We sequenced VLPs and bulk DNA from cecal-colonic samples collected from male C57BL/6J mice implanted with minipumps containing saline or angiotensin II. We assembled 106 bacterial and 816 viral genomes and found that gut viral and bacterial populations remained stable between hypertensive and normotensive mice. A higher number of temperate viruses were observed across all treatments. Although temperate viruses outnumbered virulent viruses, sequencing of both VLPs and bulk revealed that virions from virulent viruses were more abundant in the murine gut. We then evaluated the impact of low- and high-fiber intake on gut microbiome composition in the angiotensin II model. Fiber intake significantly influenced the gut microbiome composition and hypertension development. Mice receiving high-fiber had lower blood pressure, a higher bacterial-encoded carbohydrate-associated enzyme, and a higher total relative abundance of temperate viruses than those receiving low-fiber. Our findings suggest that phages are not associated with hypertension development in the angiotensin II model. However, they support a complex diet-bacteria/phage interaction that may be involved in blood pressure regulation.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11567275PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19490976.2024.2407047DOI Listing

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