Role of Metabolic Endotoxemia in Systemic Inflammation and Potential Interventions Original paper
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Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a potent endotoxin present in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria that causes chronic immune responses associated with inflammation.
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Gram-Negative Bacteria
Gram-Negative Bacteria
Gram-negative bacteria are resilient pathogens with antibiotic resistance, causing infections like UTIs, sepsis, and pneumonia.
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Karen Pendergrass
Karen Pendergrass is a microbiome researcher specializing in microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs). She systematically analyzes scientific literature to identify microbial patterns, develop hypotheses, and validate interventions. As the founder of the Microbiome Signatures Database, she bridges microbiome research with clinical practice. In 2012, based on her own investigative research, she became the first documented case of FMT for Celiac Disease—four years before the first published case study.
Microbiome Signatures identifies and validates condition-specific microbiome shifts and interventions to accelerate clinical translation. Our multidisciplinary team supports clinicians, researchers, and innovators in turning microbiome science into actionable medicine.
Karen Pendergrass is a microbiome researcher specializing in microbiome-targeted interventions (MBTIs). She systematically analyzes scientific literature to identify microbial patterns, develop hypotheses, and validate interventions. As the founder of the Microbiome Signatures Database, she bridges microbiome research with clinical practice. In 2012, based on her own investigative research, she became the first documented case of FMT for Celiac Disease—four years before the first published case study.
What was reviewed?
This review, authored by Mohammad and Thiemermann (2021), comprehensively examines the concept of metabolic endotoxemia, defined as a diet-induced increase in circulating lipopolysaccharide (LPS) levels, and its relationship with systemic inflammation and chronic disease. The paper synthesizes preclinical and clinical findings that connect high-fat diets (HFDs), increased gut permeability (“leaky gut”), translocation of LPS, and the activation of Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4)-mediated inflammatory pathways to the pathogenesis of obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), and cardiovascular disease. Additionally, it evaluates both pharmacological and dietary interventions, including antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), micronutrient modulation, and microbiome-targeted strategies to mitigate metabolic endotoxemia.
Who was reviewed?
The review draws from a diverse body of literature, including murine models (e.g., TLR4-deficient, ApoE-deficient, and HFD-fed mice), human studies in obese and diabetic individuals, and clinical interventions assessing endotoxemia through LPS or LPS-binding protein (LBP) markers. Special focus is placed on studies employing controlled dietary exposures, AMP assays, knockout models, and microbiome analysis to characterize the drivers and downstream effects of metabolic endotoxemia.
What were the most important findings?
Metabolic endotoxemia results from the translocation of gut-derived lipopolysaccharide (LPS) into systemic circulation, primarily due to dietary disruption of the intestinal epithelial barrier. HFDs induce gut dysbiosis, deplete beneficial taxa such as Bifidobacterium and Eubacterium spp., and reduce tight junction proteins (e.g., occludin, claudins, and ZO-1), resulting in increased intestinal permeability. This “leaky gut” condition facilitates LPS entry into the bloodstream, triggering TLR4/MyD88-mediated signaling cascades and NF-κB activation, thereby promoting systemic low-grade inflammation.
Clinical studies show elevated LBP and LPS levels in individuals with T2DM, atherosclerosis, and NAFLD. These increases correlate with heightened expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as TNF-α and IL-6 in adipose tissue and liver, as well as with metabolic parameters like waist-to-hip ratio and serum triglycerides. From a microbiome perspective, endotoxemia is consistently associated with altered gut microbial composition—particularly a decreased Firmicutes-to-Bacteroidetes ratio—and overexpression of TLR2/TLR4 in the intestinal tract.
The review also highlights interventions targeting metabolic endotoxemia. Antimicrobial peptides, such as defensins and LL-37, exhibit both bactericidal and LPS-neutralizing effects. Synthetic AMPs (e.g., Peptide 19-2.5) show potential in attenuating LPS-driven inflammation in sepsis models. Dietary strategies, including prebiotics (inulin, FOS), probiotics (Bifidobacterium, Lactobacillus), and micronutrient supplementation (zinc, vitamin D), offer promising routes to restore tight junction integrity and reduce circulating LPS. However, limitations in endotoxemia detection—primarily due to the unreliability of the LAL assay—complicate conclusions about causality.
What are the greatest implications of this review?
This review reinforces metabolic endotoxemia as a mechanistic link between diet, gut dysbiosis, and chronic systemic inflammation. It establishes a conceptual foundation for LPS as a biomarker and driver of cardiometabolic disease and supports microbiome-targeted interventions—especially AMP-based and dietary approaches—as plausible therapeutic strategies. However, it also underscores the limitations of current LPS detection methods (e.g., LAL assay) and calls for more robust assays and interventional trials to establish causality. For microbiome researchers, the paper offers microbial targets (Bifidobacterium, Eubacterium) and mechanistic endpoints (tight junction proteins, NF-κB, MyD88) to validate microbiome signatures of endotoxemia and develop microbiome-targeted interventions MBTIs.
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a potent endotoxin present in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria that causes chronic immune responses associated with inflammation.
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a potent endotoxin present in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria that causes chronic immune responses associated with inflammation.
Microbiome signatures are reproducible ecological and functional patterns—encompassing traits, interactions, and metabolic functions—that reflect microbial adaptation to specific host or environmental states. Beyond taxonomy, they capture conserved features like metal metabolism or immune modulation, enabling systems-level diagnosis and intervention in health and disease.
Microbiome Targeted Interventions (MBTIs) are cutting-edge treatments that utilize information from Microbiome Signatures to modulate the microbiome, revolutionizing medicine with unparalleled precision and impact.