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Detail publikačního výsledku
OURADOVA, A.; FERRERO, G.; BRATOVA, M.; DASKOVA, N.; BOHDANECKA, A.; DOHNALOVA, K.; HECZKOVA, M.; CHALUPSKY, K.; KRÁLOVÁ, M.; KUZMA, M.; MODOS, I.; TICHANEK, F.; NAJMANOVA, L.; PARDINI, B.; PELANTOVÁ, H.; TARALLO, S.; VIDENSKA, P.; GOJDA, J.; NACCARATI, A.; CAHOVA, M.
Originální název
A vegan diet signature from a multi-omics study on different European populations is related to favorable metabolic outcomes
Anglický název
Druh
Článek WoS
Originální abstrakt
Vegan and omnivorous diets differ markedly in composition, but their effects on the gut microbiome, metabolome, and lipidome across populations remain insufficiently characterized. While both diet and country of origin influence these molecular layers, the relative contribution of diet versus country-specific factors has not yet been systematically evaluated within a multi-omics framework. In this cross-sectional, bicentric, observational study, we profiled healthy vegans (n = 100) and omnivores (n = 73) from the Czech Republic and Italy using integrated microbiome, metabolome, and lipidome analyses. Findings were subsequently validated in an independent cohort (n = 142). Significant differences across all omics layers were observed for both country and diet. The predictive models confirmed diet-associated separation, with validation cohort AUCs of 0.99 (lipidome), 0.89 (metabolome), and 0.87 (microbiome). Functional metagenome analysis revealed enrichment of amino acid biosynthesis, inositol degradation, and the pentose phosphate pathway in vegans, while omnivores presented greater potential for amino acid fermentation, fatty acid biosynthesis, and propanoate metabolism. Linear models identified a robust, country-independent “vegan signature” consisting of 27 lipid metabolites, five non-lipid metabolites, and 11 bacterial species. Several lipid features associated with an omnivorous diet were inversely related to the duration of vegan diet adherence. Some of the vegan-associated metabolites and bacteria have been previously linked to favorable cardiometabolic profiles, although causality remains to be established. These findings demonstrate that vegan diets are associated with reproducible, country-independent molecular and microbial signatures. Our results highlight diet-driven shifts in host–microbiota interactions and provide a framework for understanding how dietary patterns relate to host–microbiota interactions.
Anglický abstrakt
Klíčová slova
vegan diet, shotgun metagenomic sequencing, gut microbiota, untargeted serum metabolomics, serum lipidomics
Klíčová slova v angličtině
Autoři
Vydáno
04.12.2025
Periodikum
Gut Microbes
Svazek
17
Číslo
1
Stát
Spojené státy americké
Strany počet
23
URL
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19490976.2025.2593050
Plný text v Digitální knihovně
http://hdl.handle.net/11012/255853
BibTex
@article{BUT199872, author="{} and {} and {} and {} and {} and {} and {} and {} and Maria {Králová} and {} and {} and {} and {} and {} and {} and {} and {} and {} and {} and {}", title="A vegan diet signature from a multi-omics study on different European populations is related to favorable metabolic outcomes", journal="Gut Microbes", year="2025", volume="17", number="1", pages="23", doi="10.1080/19490976.2025.2593050", issn="1949-0976", url="https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19490976.2025.2593050" }