Diabetogenically beneficial gut microbiota alterations in third trimester of pregnancy

Altered gut microbiota (dysbiosis), inflammation and weight gain are pivotal to the success of normal pregnancy. These are features of metabolic syndrome that ordinarily increase the risk of type 2 diabetes in non-pregnant individuals. Though gut microbiota influences host energy metabolism and home...

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Main Authors: Emmanuel Amabebe, Dilly O Anumba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bioscientifica 2021-04-01
Series:Reproduction and Fertility
Subjects:
gut
Online Access:https://raf.bioscientifica.com/view/journals/raf/2/1/RAF-20-0034.xml
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spelling doaj-39365ba5a019422eb1e80a804d9c833c2021-04-08T09:37:11ZengBioscientificaReproduction and Fertility2633-83862633-83862021-04-0121R1R12https://doi.org/10.1530/RAF-20-0034Diabetogenically beneficial gut microbiota alterations in third trimester of pregnancyEmmanuel Amabebe0Dilly O Anumba1Department of Oncology and Metabolism, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UKDepartment of Oncology and Metabolism, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UKAltered gut microbiota (dysbiosis), inflammation and weight gain are pivotal to the success of normal pregnancy. These are features of metabolic syndrome that ordinarily increase the risk of type 2 diabetes in non-pregnant individuals. Though gut microbiota influences host energy metabolism and homeostasis, the outcome (healthy or unhealthy) varies depending on pregnancy status. In a healthy pregnancy, the gut microbiota is altered to promote metabolic and immunological changes beneficial to the mother and foetus but could connote a disease state in non-pregnant individuals. During the later stages of gestation, metabolic syndrome-like features, that is, obesity-related gut dysbiotic microbiota, increased insulin resistance, and elevated pro-inflammatory cytokines, promote energy storage in adipose tissue for rapid foetal growth and development, and in preparation for energy-consuming processes such as parturition and lactation. The origin of this gestation-associated host–microbial interaction is still elusive. Therefore, this review critically examined the host–microbial interactions in the gastrointestinal tract of pregnant women at late gestation (third trimester) that shift host metabolism in favour of a diabetogenic or metabolic syndrome-like phenotype. Whether the diabetogenic effects of such interactions are indeed beneficial to both mother and foetus was also discussed with plausible mechanistic pathways and associations highlighted.https://raf.bioscientifica.com/view/journals/raf/2/1/RAF-20-0034.xmlpregnancygutmicrobiotadiabetesmetabolic syndromeinflammation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emmanuel Amabebe
Dilly O Anumba
spellingShingle Emmanuel Amabebe
Dilly O Anumba
Diabetogenically beneficial gut microbiota alterations in third trimester of pregnancy
Reproduction and Fertility
pregnancy
gut
microbiota
diabetes
metabolic syndrome
inflammation
author_facet Emmanuel Amabebe
Dilly O Anumba
author_sort Emmanuel Amabebe
title Diabetogenically beneficial gut microbiota alterations in third trimester of pregnancy
title_short Diabetogenically beneficial gut microbiota alterations in third trimester of pregnancy
title_full Diabetogenically beneficial gut microbiota alterations in third trimester of pregnancy
title_fullStr Diabetogenically beneficial gut microbiota alterations in third trimester of pregnancy
title_full_unstemmed Diabetogenically beneficial gut microbiota alterations in third trimester of pregnancy
title_sort diabetogenically beneficial gut microbiota alterations in third trimester of pregnancy
publisher Bioscientifica
series Reproduction and Fertility
issn 2633-8386
2633-8386
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Altered gut microbiota (dysbiosis), inflammation and weight gain are pivotal to the success of normal pregnancy. These are features of metabolic syndrome that ordinarily increase the risk of type 2 diabetes in non-pregnant individuals. Though gut microbiota influences host energy metabolism and homeostasis, the outcome (healthy or unhealthy) varies depending on pregnancy status. In a healthy pregnancy, the gut microbiota is altered to promote metabolic and immunological changes beneficial to the mother and foetus but could connote a disease state in non-pregnant individuals. During the later stages of gestation, metabolic syndrome-like features, that is, obesity-related gut dysbiotic microbiota, increased insulin resistance, and elevated pro-inflammatory cytokines, promote energy storage in adipose tissue for rapid foetal growth and development, and in preparation for energy-consuming processes such as parturition and lactation. The origin of this gestation-associated host–microbial interaction is still elusive. Therefore, this review critically examined the host–microbial interactions in the gastrointestinal tract of pregnant women at late gestation (third trimester) that shift host metabolism in favour of a diabetogenic or metabolic syndrome-like phenotype. Whether the diabetogenic effects of such interactions are indeed beneficial to both mother and foetus was also discussed with plausible mechanistic pathways and associations highlighted.
topic pregnancy
gut
microbiota
diabetes
metabolic syndrome
inflammation
url https://raf.bioscientifica.com/view/journals/raf/2/1/RAF-20-0034.xml
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