APA
Salazar, Nuria & Ponce Alonso, Manuel & Garriga, María & Sánchez Carrillo, Sergio & Hernández Barranco, Ana María & Redruello, Begoña & Fernández, María & Botella Carretero, Ignacio & Vega Piñero, Belén & Galeano, Javier & Zamora, Javier & Ferrer, Manuel & de los Reyes Gavilán, Clara G & del Campo Moreno, Rosa (2022 ) .Fecal Metabolome and Bacterial Composition in Severe Obesity: Impact of Diet and Bariatric Surgery. 
ISO 690
Salazar, Nuria & Ponce Alonso, Manuel & Garriga, María & Sánchez Carrillo, Sergio & Hernández Barranco, Ana María & Redruello, Begoña & Fernández, María & Botella Carretero, Ignacio & Vega Piñero, Belén & Galeano, Javier & Zamora, Javier & Ferrer, Manuel & de los Reyes Gavilán, Clara G & del Campo Moreno, Rosa. 2022 .Fecal Metabolome and Bacterial Composition in Severe Obesity: Impact of Diet and Bariatric Surgery. 
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/45114
 
Abstract:
The aim of this study was to monitor the impact of a preoperative low-calorie diet and bariatric 
surgery on the bacterial gut microbiota composition and functionality in severe obesity and to 
compare sleeve gastrectomy (SG) versus Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB). The study also aimed to 
incorporate big data analysis for the omics results and machine learning by a Lasso-based analysis 
to detect the potential markers for excess weight loss. Forty patients who underwent bariatric 
surgery were recruited (14 underwent SG, and 26 underwent RYGB). Each participant contributed 4 
fecal samples (baseline, post-diet, 1 month after surgery and 3 months after surgery). The bacterial 
composition was determined by 16S rDNA massive sequencing using MiSeq (Illumina). Metabolic 
signatures associated to fecal concentrations of short-chain fatty acids, amino acids, biogenic 
amines, gamma-aminobutyric acid and ammonium were determined by gas and liquid chromato graphy. Orange 3 software was employed to correlate the variables, and a Lasso analysis was 
employed to predict the weight loss at the baseline samples. A correlation between Bacillota 
(formerly Firmicutes) abundance and excess weight was observed only for the highest body mass 
indexes. The low-calorie diet had little impact on composition and targeted metabolic activity. 
RYGB had a deeper impact on bacterial composition and putrefactive metabolism than SG, 
although the excess weight loss was comparable in the two groups. Significantly higher ammonium 
concentrations were detected in the feces of the RYGB group. We detected individual signatures of 
composition and functionality, rather than a gut microbiota characteristic of severe obesity, with 
opposing tendencies for almost all measured variables in the two surgical approaches. The gut 
microbiota of the baseline samples was not useful for predicting excess weight loss after the 
bariatric process