sample sizes and a high resolution of clinical phenotypes and medication are required, while accounting for variables known to affect the gut microbiome. Finally, drug effects are often dose-dependent, yet dosage is rarely considered in microbiome studies.To overcome these limitations, we propose a general framework for separating disease from treatment associations in multi-omics cross-sectional studies and apply it to gut metagenomic, host clinical and metabolomic measurements of 2,173 European residents from the multicentre MetaCardis cohort. The MetaCardis cohort includes patients with metabolic syndrome, severe and morbid obesity, T2D, acute and chronic coronary artery disease and heart failure, and healthy control individuals. Considering cardiometabolic disease (CMD) and herein frequently prescribed medications, we investigated drug-hostmicrobiome associations for eight major indications (antidiabetic,
ObjectiveEvidence points to a founder of the multifunctional CCN family, NOV/CCN3, as a circulating molecule involved in cardiac development, vascular homeostasis and inflammation. No data are available on the relationship between plasma NOV/CCN3 levels and cardiovascular risk factors in humans. This study investigated the possible relationship between plasma NOV levels and cardiovascular risk factors in humans.MethodsNOV levels were measured in the plasma from 594 adults with a hyperlipidemia history and/or with lipid-lowering therapy and/or a body mass index (BMI) >30 kg/m2. Correlations were measured between NOV plasma levels and various parameters, including BMI, fat mass, and plasma triglycerides, cholesterol, glucose, and C-reactive protein. NOV expression was also evaluated in adipose tissue from obese patients and rodents and in primary cultures of adipocytes and macrophages.ResultsAfter full multivariate adjustment, we detected a strong positive correlation between plasma NOV and BMI (r = 0.36 p<0.0001) and fat mass (r = 0.33 p<0.0005). According to quintiles, this relationship appeared to be linear. NOV levels were also positively correlated with C-reactive protein but not with total cholesterol, LDL-C or blood glucose. In patients with drastic weight loss induced by Roux-en-Y bariatric surgery, circulating NOV levels decreased by 28% (p<0.02) and 48% (p<0.0001) after 3 and 6 months, respectively, following surgery. In adipose tissue from obese patients, and in human primary cultures NOV protein was detected in adipocytes and macrophages. In mice fed a high fat diet NOV plasma levels and its expression in adipose tissue were also significantly increased compared to controls fed a standard diet.ConclusionOur results strongly suggest that in obese humans and mice plasma NOV levels positively correlated with NOV expression in adipose tissue, and support a possible contribution of NOV to obesity-related inflammation.
The resistance to weight loss and proneness to weight regain could be predicted by the combination of high plasma insulin and inflammatory markers before dietary intervention.
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