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  4. Aging and sarcopenia associate with specific interactions between gut microbes, serum biomarkers and host physiology in rats
 
research article

Aging and sarcopenia associate with specific interactions between gut microbes, serum biomarkers and host physiology in rats

Siddharth, Jay
•
Chakrabarti, Anirikh
•
Pannerec, Alice
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2017
Aging-Us

The microbiome has been demonstrated to play an integral role in the maintenance of many aspects of health that are also associated with aging. In order to identify areas of potential exploration and intervention, we simultaneously characterized age-related alterations in gut microbiome, muscle physiology and serum proteomic and lipidomic profiles in aged rats to define an integrated signature of the aging phenotype. We demonstrate that aging skews the composition of the gut microbiome, in particular by altering the Sutterella to Barneseilla ratio, and alters the metabolic potential of intestinal bacteria. Age-related changes of the gut microbiome were associated with the physiological decline of musculoskeletal function, and with molecular markers of nutrient processing/availability, and inflammatory/immune status in aged versus adult rats. Altogether, our study highlights that aging leads to a complex interplay between the microbiome and host physiology, and provides candidate microbial species to target physical and metabolic decline during aging by modulating gut microbial ecology.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.18632/aging.101262
Web of Science ID

WOS:000407050000007

Author(s)
Siddharth, Jay
Chakrabarti, Anirikh
Pannerec, Alice
Karaz, Sonia
Morin-Rivron, Delphine
Masoodi, Mojgan
Feige, Jerome N.
Parkinson, Scott James
Date Issued

2017

Publisher

Impact Journals Llc

Published in
Aging-Us
Volume

9

Issue

7

Start page

1698

End page

1720

Subjects

aging

•

microbiome

•

sarcopenia

•

lipidomics

•

proteomics

•

muscle physiology

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
SV  
Available on Infoscience
September 5, 2017
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/140243
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