Gut Microbial Metabolite TMAO Enhances Platelet Hyperreactivity and Thrombosis Risk

نویسندگان

  • Weifei Zhu
  • Jill C. Gregory
  • Elin Org
  • Jennifer A. Buffa
  • Nilaksh Gupta
  • Zeneng Wang
  • Lin Li
  • Xiaoming Fu
  • Yuping Wu
  • Margarete Mehrabian
  • R. Balfour Sartor
  • Thomas M. McIntyre
  • Roy L. Silverstein
  • W. H. Wilson Tang
  • Joseph A. DiDonato
  • J. Mark Brown
  • Aldons J. Lusis
  • Stanley L. Hazen
چکیده

Normal platelet function is critical to blood hemostasis and maintenance of a closed circulatory system. Heightened platelet reactivity, however, is associated with cardiometabolic diseases and enhanced potential for thrombotic events. We now show gut microbes, through generation of trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), directly contribute to platelet hyperreactivity and enhanced thrombosis potential. Plasma TMAO levels in subjects (n > 4,000) independently predicted incident (3 years) thrombosis (heart attack, stroke) risk. Direct exposure of platelets to TMAO enhanced sub-maximal stimulus-dependent platelet activation from multiple agonists through augmented Ca(2+) release from intracellular stores. Animal model studies employing dietary choline or TMAO, germ-free mice, and microbial transplantation collectively confirm a role for gut microbiota and TMAO in modulating platelet hyperresponsiveness and thrombosis potential and identify microbial taxa associated with plasma TMAO and thrombosis potential. Collectively, the present results reveal a previously unrecognized mechanistic link between specific dietary nutrients, gut microbes, platelet function, and thrombosis risk.

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • Cell

دوره 165  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2016