Illustration of gut microbes producing TMA to inhibit inflammation and improve insulin action, contrasting high-fat diet harms with therapeutic potential.
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Gut microbe molecule TMA may help curb inflammation and improve insulin control

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An international team of researchers has identified trimethylamine (TMA), a gut microbe metabolite produced from dietary nutrients such as choline, as a compound that inhibits the immune-signalling protein IRAK4, dampening inflammation and improving insulin action in experimental models. The discovery, reported in Nature Metabolism, suggests a potential new way to counter some of the harmful metabolic effects of high-fat diets and opens avenues for future type 2 diabetes therapies, a disease affecting more than 500 million people worldwide.

An international study led by scientists at Imperial College London, the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), Université catholique de Louvain, INSERM in Paris and the University of Ottawa Heart Institute builds on years of research into how diet and the gut microbiome influence metabolism.

According to background described by the team and earlier work from co-author Professor Patrice Cani, high-fat diets can allow bacterial components such as lipopolysaccharides to enter the bloodstream, activating immune pathways and promoting the low-grade inflammation that contributes to insulin resistance in type 2 diabetes. That concept, sometimes referred to as "metabolic endotoxemia", was considered controversial when first proposed in the mid‑2000s but is now widely supported in the metabolic disease field.

In the new work, published 8 December 2025 in Nature Metabolism, researchers report that TMA, a small molecule generated by gut bacteria when they break down nutrients including choline in food, can modulate this inflammatory process.

The study shows that under a high‑fat diet, the signalling protein IRAK4 (interleukin‑1 receptor‑associated kinase 4) is a central regulator of immune activation that drives chronic, diet‑induced inflammation and impaired insulin responses. Using a combination of primary human cell models, mouse experiments and molecular screening approaches, the team found that TMA binds to IRAK4 and inhibits its kinase activity. In these experimental systems, TMA reduced inflammation linked to high‑fat feeding and improved glycaemic control and insulin sensitivity.

The researchers also report that TMA improved survival in mice exposed to lipopolysaccharide‑induced septic shock by attenuating overwhelming inflammatory responses, an effect consistent with its IRAK4‑blocking action. Genetic deletion or pharmacological inhibition of IRAK4 produced comparable improvements in metabolic and immune parameters in high‑fat‑fed mice, reinforcing IRAK4 as a potential drug target, according to the study in Nature Metabolism.

“This flips the narrative,” said Professor Marc‑Emmanuel Dumas of Imperial College London and CNRS, one of the senior authors, in a statement released by the University of Ottawa Heart Institute and other institutional partners. “We’ve shown that a molecule from our gut microbes can actually protect against the harmful effects of a poor diet through a new mechanism. It’s a new way of thinking about how the microbiome influences our health.”

“This shows how nutrition and our gut microbes can work together by producing molecules that fight inflammation and improve metabolic health,” added Professor Patrice Cani of Université catholique de Louvain and Imperial College London.

The research team included collaborators from Belgium, Canada, Australia, France, Italy and Spain. The work was supported by a range of national and international funders, including European and UK agencies such as the European Research Council and the Medical Research Council, as described in the study acknowledgments.

The authors note that TMA’s actions appear to differ from those of its liver‑derived co‑metabolite trimethylamine N‑oxide (TMAO), which has been associated in previous research with cardiovascular risk. In the context of diet‑induced obesity in mice, increasing TMA relative to TMAO by targeting the enzyme that converts TMA to TMAO improved immune tone and glucose control in their experiments, suggesting that carefully modulating this metabolic axis could be a future strategy to combat insulin resistance. However, the researchers stress that the current findings are based on preclinical models and mechanistic studies, and that more work will be needed before any clinical applications can be developed.

人々が言っていること

Initial reactions on X to the Nature Metabolism study are predominantly positive among scientists, researchers, and health news outlets. Key points highlighted include TMA's role in inhibiting IRAK4 to reduce inflammation, improve insulin sensitivity, and counter high-fat diet effects, with potential for type 2 diabetes therapies. Prominent figures express excitement about microbiome's protective mechanisms. No significant negative or skeptical views observed.

関連記事

Realistic illustration of mouse gut microbiome metabolites traveling to liver, impacting energy and insulin for obesity-diabetes research.
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ハーバード主導の研究、腸内代謝物が肥満と糖尿病リスクに影響する可能性をマッピング

AIによるレポート AIによって生成された画像 事実確認済み

ハーバード大学とブラジルの研究者らが、腸内細菌によって生成され、門脈を通って肝臓に運ばれ、マウスのエネルギー利用とインスリン感受性に影響を与える代謝物を特定した。この発見はCell Metabolismに掲載され、腸-肝コミュニケーションを標的とした肥満や2型糖尿病の予防・治療の新たな戦略を示唆している。([sciencedaily.com](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/12/251214100926.htm?utm_source=openai))

新たな研究で、化学療法による腸管内壁の損傷が予期せずマイクロバイオタを再構築し、がんの広がりに対する免疫防御を強化する化合物を作り出すことが明らかになった。このプロセスは免疫抑制細胞を減らし、特に肝臓での転移耐性を高める。患者データでは、この化合物の高レベルが大腸がん症例の生存率向上と関連している。

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研究者らは、肥満者の口腔マイクロバイオームに独自のシグネチャーを発見し、早期発見と予防戦略の可能性を提供するかもしれない。エミラティ成人からの唾液サンプルに基づくこの発見は、代謝機能障害に関連する細菌と代謝経路の違いを強調している。しかし、科学者らはこの関係の因果関係は依然として不明であると警告している。

小規模臨床試験で、糞便マイクロバイオタ移植が免疫療法薬を使用する腎臓がん患者の治療成績を改善することが示された。移植を受けた参加者は、プラセボを与えられた患者に比べてがんの安定期間が長く、腫瘍の縮小が大きかった。この手法は腸内マイクロバイオームを標的とし、腫瘍に対する免疫応答を強化する。

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MITの新しい研究は、長期の高脂肪食が肝細胞を原始的な状態に追い込み、がんへの脆弱性を高めることを示しています。マウスとヒトのサンプルを分析することで、科学者たちはこれらの細胞変化が正常機能よりも生存を優先し、腫瘍への道を開く仕組みを明らかにしました。『Cell』に掲載された知見は、このリスクを軽減するための潜在的な薬剤標的を強調しています。

研究者らは、人間の血液細菌Paracoccus sanguinisからインドール代謝物を特定し、これらが実験室で培養した人間の皮膚細胞で抗加齢活性を示した。これらの化合物は、細胞実験で酸化ストレス、炎症、コラーゲン分解活性を減少させた。Journal of Natural Productsに掲載された知見による。

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Researchers at Karolinska Institutet and Stockholm University have developed an experimental oral drug that boosts metabolism in skeletal muscle, improving blood sugar control and fat burning in early studies without reducing appetite or muscle mass. Unlike GLP-1-based drugs such as Ozempic, the candidate acts directly on muscle tissue and has shown good tolerability in an initial clinical trial, according to the study authors.

 

 

 

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