Intestinal Microbial Metabolism of Phosphatidylcholine and Cardiovascular Risk
Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine
Abstract
Recent studies in animals have shown a mechanistic link between intestinal microbial metabolism of the choline moiety in dietary phosphatidylcholine (lecithin) and coronary artery disease through the production of a proatherosclerotic metabolite, trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO). We investigated the relationship among intestinal microbiota-dependent metabolism of dietary phosphatidylcholine, TMAO levels, and adverse cardiovascular events in humans.
We quantified plasma and urinary levels of TMAO and plasma choline and betaine levels by means of liquid chromatography and online tandem mass spectrometry after a phosphatidylcholine challenge (ingestion of two hard-boiled eggs and deuterium [d9]-labeled phosphatidylcholine) in healthy participants before and after the suppression of intestinal microbiota with oral broad-spectrum antibiotics. We further examined the relationship between fasting plasma levels of TMAO and incident major adverse cardiovascular events (death, myocardial infarction, or stroke) during 3 years of follow-up in 4007 patients undergoing elective coronary angiography.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 83.30
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 27
Authors
8- WWW.H. Wilson TangCorresponding
Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine
- ZWZeneng Wang
Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine
- BSBruce S. Levison
Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine
- RKRobert Koeth
Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine
- EBEarl B. Britt
Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine
Topics & keywords
- Phosphatidylcholine
- Choline
- Metabolism
- Metabolite
- Medicine
- Lipid metabolism
- Trimethylamine N-oxide
- Microbial metabolism
- Good health and well-being