Adipose Tissue, Bile Acids, and Gut Microbiome Species Associated With Gallstones After Bariatric Surgery
Journal article, 2022

Several risk factors are associated with gallstone disease after bariatric surgery, but the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms of gallstone formation are unclear. We hypothesize that gallstone formation after bariatric surgery is induced by different pathways compared with gallstone formation in the general population, since postoperative formation occurs rapidly in patients who did not develop gallstones in preceding years. To identify both pathophysiological and potentially protective mechanisms against postoperative gallstone formation, we compared the preoperative fasting metabolome, fecal microbiome, and liver and adipose tissue transcriptome obtained before or during bariatric surgery of obese patients with and without postoperative gallstones. In total, 88 patients were selected from the BARIA longitudinal cohort study. Within this group, 32 patients had postoperative gallstones within 2 years. Gut microbiota metagenomic analyses showed group differences in abundance of 41 bacterial species, particularly abundance of Lactobacillaceae and Enterobacteriaceae in patients without gallstones. Subcutaneous adipose tissue transcriptomic analyses revealed four genes that were suppressed in gallstone patients compared with patients without gallstones. These baseline gene expression and gut microbiota composition differences might relate to protective mechanisms against gallstone formation after bariatric surgery. Moreover, baseline fasting blood samples of patients with postoperative gallstones showed increased levels of several bile acids. Overall, we revealed different genes and bacteria associated with gallstones than those previously reported in the general population, supporting the hypothesis that gallstone formation after bariatric surgery follows a different trajectory. Further research is necessary to confirm the involvement of the bile acids, adipose tissue activity, and microbial species observed here.

BARIA study

conjugated bile acids

metagenomics

gallstone disease

gallstone formation

Lactobacillaceae

transcriptomic

visceral adipose tissue

subcutaneous adipose tissue

metabolomics

Author

M. S.S. Guman

University of Amsterdam

J. B. Hoozemans

University of Amsterdam

S. Haal

Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism

P. A. de Jonge

University of Amsterdam

O. Aydin

University of Amsterdam

Dimitra Lappa

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Systems and Synthetic Biology

A. S. Meijnikman

University of Amsterdam

F. Westerink

University of Amsterdam

Y. I.Z. Acherman

Spaarne Gasthuis

Fredrik Bäckhed

Wallenberg Lab.

Maurits de Brauw

Spaarne Gasthuis

Jens B Nielsen

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Systems and Synthetic Biology

M. Nieuwdorp

University of Amsterdam

A. K. Groen

University of Amsterdam

V. E.A. Gerdes

University of Amsterdam

Journal of Lipid Research

0022-2275 (ISSN) 1539-7262 (eISSN)

Vol. 63 11 100280-

Subject Categories

Surgery

Gastroenterology and Hepatology

Neurology

DOI

10.1016/j.jlr.2022.100280

PubMed

36115596

More information

Latest update

10/27/2023