Predicting cardiovascular disease risk from gut microbial genes

mBio. 2023 Oct 16;14(6):e0197023. doi: 10.1128/mbio.01970-23. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Gut bacteria-driven production of trimethylamine (TMA) is strongly associated with cardiovascular disease. Borton et al. (mBio 14:e01511-23, 2023, https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.01511-23) introduce the Methylated Amine Gene Inventory of Catabolism database (MAGICdb), comprehensively cataloging pathways involved in TMA metabolism. By integrating transcriptomics, proteomics, and metagenomic data, this work identifies key bacterial players in the process and can link gut microbial gene content to fecal TMA concentrations. This work shows that methylated amine metabolism is a keystone microbiome process carried out by a small proportion of the community. Proatherogenic pathways are more widely distributed among the gut microbiota, and new TMA-reducing genera were identified that might offer new potential for probiotic strategies or targeted microbiome interventions. Remarkably, MAGICdb's power to predict cardiovascular disease risk matches an approach using more traditional lipid risk factors. This open source will be a valuable tool for the community to link methylated amine metabolism to gut microbiome-related human health conditions.

Keywords: cardiovascular disease; metabolism; microbiome.