Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the link between gut microbiota and calcific aortic valve disease (CAVD), revealing that certain gut bacteria are associated with the severity of the disease.
  • Faecal transplants from mice less prone to calcification showed improvement in CAVD, and butyric acid, a metabolite from gut bacteria, was identified as an important factor that reduces calcification and may affect heart tissue metabolism.
  • Clinical findings support these results, showing that higher serum levels of butyric acid correspond to less severe CAVD in patients, suggesting that targeting this gut-derived metabolite could be a new approach for therapy.

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Article Abstract

The involvement of gut microbiota in calcific aortic valve disease (CAVD) pathogenesis remains underexplored. Here, we provide evidence for a strong association between the gut microbiota and CAVD development. ApoE mice were stratified into easy- and difficult- to calcify groups using neural network and cluster analyses, and subsequent faecal transplantation and dirty cage sharing experiments demonstrated that the microbiota from difficult-to-calcify mice significantly ameliorated CAVD. 16S rRNA sequencing revealed that reduced abundance of () was significantly associated with increased calcification severity. Association analysis identified -derived butyric acid as a key anti-calcific metabolite. These findings were validated in a clinical cohort (25 CAVD patients vs. 25 controls), where serum butyric acid levels inversely correlated with disease severity. Functional experiments showed that butyric acid effectively hindered osteogenic differentiation in human aortic valve interstitial cells (hVICs) and attenuated CAVD progression in mice. Isotope labeling and C flux analyses confirmed that butyric acid produced in the intestine can reach heart tissue, where it reshapes glycolysis by specifically modifying GAPDH. Mechanistically, butyric acid-induced butyrylation (Kbu) at lysine 263 of GAPDH competitively inhibited lactylation (Kla) at the same site, thereby counteracting glycolysis-driven calcification. These findings uncover a novel mechanism through which and its metabolite butyric acid contribute to the preservation of valve function in CAVD, highlighting the gut microbiota-metabolite-glycolysis axis as a promising therapeutic target.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12371252PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/imt2.70048DOI Listing

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