Gut Microbiota and Critical Metabolites: Potential Target in Preventing Gestational Diabetes Mellitus?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Gut Microbiota Changes during Normal Pregnancy
3. Gut Microbiota and Related Metabolic Changes during GDM
4. GDM–Gut Interaction
4.1. Effect of Metabolic Overload and Chronic Inflammation on Gut Microecology
4.2. Roles of Gut Microecology in GDM
4.2.1. Gut Microbiota Dysbiosis
4.2.2. Roles of Critical Metabolites
5. Prospect and Implication
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author, Year | Study Design | Group Setting | Time | Measurements | Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
During the first trimester | |||||
Mokkala, 2017 [44] | Case-control study | 15 Women who developed GDM VS. 60 healthy pregnant women | 10.4–15.4 weeks of gestation | 16S RNA gene sequencing, QIIME pipeline | 1. Ruminococcaceae family were increased in GDM women; 2. Ruminococcaceae family ≥26.8% predicted positive GDM diagnosis (sensitivity: 60%, specificity: 88%). |
Ma, 2020 [46] | Case-control study | 98 Women who developed GDM VS. 98 healthy pregnant women | 10–15 weeks of gestation | 16S rRNA microarray, Shotgun metagenomics sequencing | 1. Eisenbergiella, Tyzzerella 4, and Lachnospiraceae NK4A136 were enriched in the GDM group; 2. Eisenbergiella and Tyzzerella 4 were positively correlated with FBS. |
Hu, 2021 [47] | Case-control study | 201 Women who developed GDM VS. 201 matched controls | 6–15 weeks of gestation | 16S rRNA microarray | 1. Actinomyces, Adlercreutzia, Bifidobacterium, Coriobacteriaceae, Lachnospiraceae spp., and Rothia were reduced in GDM women; 2. Enterobacteriaceae, Ruminococcaceae spp., and Veillonellaceae were augmented in GDM women 3. Abundances of Staphylococcus relative to Clostridium, Coriobacteriaceae, and Roseburia were positively correlated with FBS and postprandial glucose levels. |
During the second trimester | |||||
Kuang, 2017 [17] | Case-control study | 43 GDM patients VS. 81 healthy pregnant women | 21–29 weeks of gestation | Whole-metagenome shotgun sequencing | 1. P. distasonis, Klebsiella variicola, and Catenibacterium mitsuokai were elevated in women with GDM, which were positively associated with maternal glucose levels; 2. Alistipess spp., Bifidobacterium spp., Eubacterium spp., and Methanobrevibacter smithii were lowered. |
Chen, 2021 [35] | Case-control study | 30 GDM patients VS. 28 healthy pregnant women | 24–28 weeks of gestation | 16S rRNA microarray | 1. Bifidobacterium spp., and Eubacterium spp., were depleted in GDM patients; 2. Corynebacterium spp., Lactobacillus spp., and Blautia hydrogenotrophica were enriched in GDM patients. |
Ye, 2019 [48] | Case-control study | 24 GDM patients with successful glycemic control vs. 12 failure of glycemic control | 24–28 weeks of gestation | 16S rRNA sequencing | 1. The abundance of Blautia and Eubacterium hallii group was augmented in GDM patients who failed to control glycemic; 2. The richness of Faecalibacterium was reduced in GDM patients who failed to control glycemic. |
Chen, 2021 [36] | Case-control study | 110 GDM patients VS. 220 healthy pregnant women | 22–24 weeks of gestation | 16S rRNA sequencing | 1. GDM patients had lower α-diversity that was significantly associated with glycemic; 2. Seven genera within the phylum Firmicutes and two within the phylum Actinobacteria were decreased in GDM patients; 3. Four genera within phylum Bacteroidetes were elevated in GDM patients. |
Wei, 2022 [49] | Cross-sectional study | 15 GDM patients VS. 18 healthy pregnant women | 24–28 weeks of gestation | 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing | 1. No difference in α-diversity; 2. Ruminococcus bromii, Clostridium colinum, and Streptococcus infantis were increased in GDM patients; 3. S. infantis were positively associated with blood glucose levels after adjusting for BMI. |
Festa, 2020 [42] | Cross-sectional study | 14 GDM patients VS. 15 healthy pregnant women matched on BMI | 24–28 weeks of gestation | 16S rRNA microarray | 1. No difference in β-diversity in women with GDM; 2. Abundances of Bacteroides caccae, Bacteroides massiliensis, and Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron were elevated in GDM patients; 3. Abundance of Bacteroides vulgatus, Eubacterium eligens, Lactobacillus rogosae, and Prevotella copri were suppressed in women with GDM. |
Zhang, 2021 [39] | Prospective cohort study | 128 GDM patients VS. 709 healthy pregnant women | 22–24 weeks of gestation | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | 1. Women who later progressed to GDM showed decreased α-diversity; 2. Genera belonging to Ruminococcaceae, Coriobacteriales, and Lachnospiraceae were decreased in GDM patients |
Liang, 2022 [50] | Case-control study | 35 GDM patients VS. 25 healthy pregnant women | 24–28 weeks of gestation | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | 1. Abundances of Bacteroides and Lachnoclostridium were elevated in GDM patients; 2. Ruminococcaceae UCG-002, Ruminococcaceae UCG-005, Clostridium sensu stricto 1, and Streptococcus were reduced in GDM patients; 3. Paraprevotella, Roseburia, Faecalibacterium, and Ruminococcaceae_UCG-002 were negatively correlated with glucose; 4. Ruminococcaceae_UCG-002 was negatively correlated with hemoglobin A1c; 5. Bacteroides was positively correlated with glucose; 6. Sutterella, Oscillibacter, and Bifidobacterium were positively correlated with GLP-1. |
During the third trimester | |||||
Wang, 2018 [19] | Cross-sectional study | 581 maternal and 248 neonatal samples | During the third trimester | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | The abundance of Faecalibacterium was reduced in GDM patients. |
Crusel, 2018 [18] | Case-control study | 50 GDM patients VS. 157 healthy pregnant women | During the third trimester and 8 months postpartum | 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing | 1. Actinobacteria at the phylum level and Collinsella, Desulfovibrio, and Rothia at the genus level were enriched in GDM women; 2. After adjustment for BMI, OTUs allocated to Akkermansia were associated with decreased insulin sensitivity, while Christensenella OTUs were associated with greater fasting plasma glucose concentration in GDM women; 3. Aberrant composition of the gut microbiome can be observed till 8 months after birth. |
Cortez, 2019 [37] | Cross-sectional study | 26 GDM patients VS. 42 healthy pregnant women | 28–36 weeks of gestation | Next-generation sequencing | 1. Abundances of Firmicutes phylum were increased in the GDM group, while that of the Bacteroidetes phylum was increased in the control group; 2. GDM patients have a higher ratio of Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes. |
Ferrocino, 2018 [52] | Cohort study | 41 GDM patients | 24–28 weeks and at 38 weeks of gestation | 16S amplicon-based sequencing | Firmicutes were enriched, and Bacteroidetes and Actinobacteria were decreased in GDM patients. |
Xu, 2020 [38] | Cross-sectional study | 30 GDM patients VS. 31 healthy pregnant women | During the third trimester | 16S rRNA sequencing | 1. GDM cases showed lower α-diversity; 2. Abundances of Gammaproteobacteria and Haemophilus were augmented in women with GDM |
Li, 2021 [43] | Cross-sectional study | 23 GDM patients VS. 29 healthy pregnant women | >28 weeks of gestation | 16S rRNA sequencing | 1. Greater α-diversity in women with GDM; 2. A larger proportion of Firmicutes and a lower proportion of Bacteroides in women with GDM. |
From the first trimester to the second trimester | |||||
Zheng, 2020 [53] | Cross-sectional study | 31 GDM patients VS. 103 healthy pregnant women | During the first half of pregnancy | 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing | Coprococcus and Streptococcus levels were consistently reduced in women with GDM. |
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Hu, R.; Liu, Z.; Geng, Y.; Huang, Y.; Li, F.; Dong, H.; Ma, W.; Song, K.; Zhang, M.; Song, Y. Gut Microbiota and Critical Metabolites: Potential Target in Preventing Gestational Diabetes Mellitus? Microorganisms 2023, 11, 1725. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11071725
Hu R, Liu Z, Geng Y, Huang Y, Li F, Dong H, Ma W, Song K, Zhang M, Song Y. Gut Microbiota and Critical Metabolites: Potential Target in Preventing Gestational Diabetes Mellitus? Microorganisms. 2023; 11(7):1725. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11071725
Chicago/Turabian StyleHu, Runan, Zhuo Liu, Yuli Geng, Yanjing Huang, Fan Li, Haoxu Dong, Wenwen Ma, Kunkun Song, Mingmin Zhang, and Yufan Song. 2023. "Gut Microbiota and Critical Metabolites: Potential Target in Preventing Gestational Diabetes Mellitus?" Microorganisms 11, no. 7: 1725. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11071725
APA StyleHu, R., Liu, Z., Geng, Y., Huang, Y., Li, F., Dong, H., Ma, W., Song, K., Zhang, M., & Song, Y. (2023). Gut Microbiota and Critical Metabolites: Potential Target in Preventing Gestational Diabetes Mellitus? Microorganisms, 11(7), 1725. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11071725