The gut microbiota benefits humans via short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production from carbohydrate fermentation, and deficiency in SCFA production is associated with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). We conducted a randomized clinical study of specifically designed isoenergetic diets, together with fecal shotgun metagenomics, to show that a select group of SCFA-producing strains was promoted by dietary fibers and that most other potential producers were either diminished or unchanged in patients with T2DM. When the fiber-promoted SCFA producers were present in greater diversity and abundance, participants had better improvement in hemoglobin A1c levels, partly via increased glucagon-like peptide-1 production. Promotion of these positive responders diminished producers of metabolically detrimental compounds such as indole and hydrogen sulfide. Targeted restoration of these SCFA producers may present a novel ecological approach for managing T2DM.
Design
and synthesis of air-stable and easily tailored high-performance
single-molecule magnets (SMMs) are of great significance toward the
implementation of SMMs in molecular-based magneto-electronic devices.
Here, by introducing electron-withdrawing fluorinated substituents on equatorial
ligand, two chiral Dy(III) macrocyclic complexes, RRRR-Dy-D
6hF12 (1) and SSSS-Dy-D
6hF12 (2), with a record anisotropy barrier exceeding
1800 K and the longest relaxation time approaching 2500 s at 2.0 K
for all known air-stable SMMs, were obtained. The nearly perfect axiality
of the ground Kramers doublet (KD) enables the open hysteresis loops
up to 20 K in the magnetically diluted sample. It is notable that
they are structurally rigid with high thermal stability and the apical
ligand can be tailored to carry proper surface-binding groups. This
finding not only improves the magnetic properties for air-stable SMMs
but also provides a new avenue for deposition of SMMs on surfaces.
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