Research Article: Effects of menopausal hormone therapy on gut microbiota in postmenopausal women and the relationship with bone metabolism
Abstract:
Menopausal Hormone Replacement Therapy (MHT) is widely used by peri- and post-menopausal women to alleviate menopause-related symptoms and preventing bone loss, but the underlying mechanisms remain inadequately elucidated. Accumulating evidence suggested that gut microbiota was involved in the regulation of bone metabolic processes. The aim of this study was to characterize the alterations in gut microbiota profiles by MHT treatment in postmenopausal women and explore the relationship between gut microbiota and bone metabolism.
Fecal samples collected from a total of 31 postmenopausal women with or without MHT were subjected to 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene sequencing and short-chain fatty acid (SCFAs) analysis in this study. The serum levels of bone metabolic markers were determined via chemiluminescent immunoassays. Spearman correlation coefficient was utilizes to assess the correlation between genera and bone metabolism indexes.
Postmenopausal women undergoing MHT exhibited lower serum procollagen type I N propeptide (P1NP) and C-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen (CTX-1). Significant differences in alpha diversity and beta diversity were observed in the microbial compositions between two groups ( P < 0.05). Of the total 295 microbial taxa identified, 16 taxa displayed significant differential abundance, with Coprococcus, Eubacterium_ruminantium_group, Lachnospiraceae_UCG-010 being more enriched in MHT+, correlating with lower bone metabolic markers and higher estrogen level. Conversely, Escherichia-Shigella taxa was more abundant in MHT- group, positively correlating with high bone metabolic markers and lower estrogen level. SCFAs appeared to have a limited role in bone metabolism but were found to be associated with several genera, including Coprococcus, Adlercreutzia, Colidextribacter.
The findings of the study demonstrated that MHT has the potential to prevent osteoporosis through the alteration of the gut microbial composition in postmenopausal women and identified promising microbial taxonomic that may contribute to the protective effects of MHT on bone mass conservation. Comparing with most previous studies that focused on the gut microbiota profiles between individuals with different bone mass, our study emphasized the protective role of gut microbiota in MHT process while bone mineral content (BMC) has no significant difference.
Introduction:
Osteoporosis is a progressive systemic skeletal disease characterized by reduced bone mass and microarchitectural alteration in bone tissue. Estrogen facilitates gut injury repair. Impairment of this function in low-estrogen states, such as postmenopause, may compromise intestinal barrier integrity, resulting in increased gut permeability. This promotes bacterial translocation—the dissemination of gut microbiota to extraintestinal sites via the bloodstream—potentially elevating the risk of metabolic and systemic…
Read more