Genetic causal relationship between gut microbiota and osteoporosis:analysis of 211 gut microbiota from the UK database
BACKGROUND:Osteoporosis is defined as a chronic metabolic bone disease,and a large amount of evidence has shown that gut microbiota is involved in osteoporosis.However,the causal relationship between gut microbiota and osteoporosis is yet unclear.OBJECTIVE:To evaluate the potential causal relationship between gut microbiota and osteoporosis using the two-sample Mendelian randomization.METHODS:Pooled statistics from the MiBioGen Consortium's Genome-Wide Association Analysis(GWAS)of gut microbiota and GWAS data from the UK Biometric Sample database for osteoporosis were used.Inverse variance weighting(IVW),MR-Egger regression,weighted median,weighted model and simple model were used to study the causal relationship between gut microbiota and osteoporosis.Sensitivity analysis was used to test whether the results of Mendelian randomization are reliable.RESULTS AND CONCLUSION:The inverse variance weighted method showed that there was a causal relationship between gut microbiota and osteoporosis.Among them,the R7 genus of Christensenaceae(MR Egger:β=-0.007;IVW:β=-0.004,P=0.028),Coprococus 3(MR Egger:β=-0.008;IVW:β=-0.003,P=0.046)and Trichospirillum(MR Egger:β=-0.009;IVW:β=-0.004,P=0.003)may be protective factors for osteoporosis,while Hotella(MR Egger:β=0.006;IVW:β=0.002,P=0.033)and Eubacterium oxyoxide(MR Egger:β=0.001;IVW:β=0.003,P=0.046)may be potential risk factors for osteoporosis.Eubacterium oxyoxide and Hotella can increase the risk of osteoporosis,while R7 of Christensenaceae,Coprococcus 3 and Spirillum can reduce the risk of osteoporosis.Whether this conclusion also applies to non-European populations will need to be verified in the future by large clinical trials in different groups.