Elevated levels of phenylacetylglutamine (PAG)  - a byproduct created when microbes in the gut breakdown dietary protein - can  be directly linked to both increased heart failure risk and severity, according  to findings published in Circulation: Heart Failure.
        New research at Cleveland Clinic expands the  link between what we eat and how the gut microbiome impacts our susceptibility  to develop different diseases - in this case, how a specific gut  microbe-generated byproduct is linked to heart failure risk.
        The new findings improve researchers'  understanding of how the gut microbiome, through PAG levels, are linked to  cardiac disease risks, and suggest potential approaches to modify  PAG-associated risks through interventions such as diet and beta blocker use. 
        Elevated PAG levels also were shown to  correspond with types of heart failure. For example, elevated blood PAG was  observed in subjects with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, a  condition where the heart muscle doesn't relax enough between beats and becomes  too stiff, making it less able to fill and consequently pump blood.
        "Measuring blood PAG levels could provide  striking value for predicting who's at risk for heart failure," says Stanley  Hazen, M.D., Ph.D., department chair of Cardiovascular & Metabolic Sciences  in Lerner Research Institute. "The data build a strong case that making this  test available for clinicians would add to their arsenal of diagnostic tests  for heart failure."
        A team led by Dr. Hazen, who also serves as  co-section head of Preventive Cardiology, previously discovered the link  between PAG and cardiovascular diseases, including risk for heart attack,  stroke and death in a 2020 study. In that study, PAG was shown to affect the  function of adrenergic receptors on platelets, impacting functions like blood  clotting risks.
        This new study dug deeper into other potential  functions of PAG with focus on heart failure. The team of investigators found  that PAG levels were linked to heart failure risks through patient data from thousands  of patients in two independent study cohorts, one from Europe and another the  U.S. In other studies, introducing PAG into cardiac cells in the lab allowed  researchers to better understand the mechanism behind PAG's association with  heart failure – and a foundation for countering its effects.
        "This study substantially expands the breadth  of possible links between our diet and how our gut microbiome serves as a  filter of our diet, impacting our susceptibility to develop different  diseases," Dr. Hazen says. "In this case, gut microbes form a metabolite from  the amino acid phenylalanine in dietary protein, adversely impacting the  function of a beating cardiac muscle cell."
        Targeting PAG to solve a critical health  condition
        About 6.2 million American adults have heart  failure, a condition where the heart can't pump enough blood and oxygen to meet  the needs of the body. Existing treatments include lifestyle changes, like  reducing sodium or medications. 
        "Despite the latest advances in drug and  device therapies, heart failure continues to be one of the leading causes of  death and hospital admissions in the United States and worldwide," says W. H.  Wilson Tang, M.D., research director for Heart Failure and Transplantation in  the Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, and a co-author of the paper. "These  studies suggest a better understanding on how we can modify PAG levels and  lower heart failure risk is worth exploring." 
        In the initial studies on PAG in 2020, Drs.  Hazen, Tang and colleagues showed how PAG affects multiple adrenergic receptors  in cells – including the beta-adrenergic receptor that beta-blockers target.  Those studies included evidence for using drugs like carvedilol to counteract  PAG effects. 
        One of the next steps Dr. Hazen's team is  focusing on is to identify the bacteria and their enzymes that help to produce  PAG, and development of therapeutic approaches to reduce PAG. Dietary  interventions could also potentially help reduce risk, Dr. Hazen says.
Reference:
Kymberleigh A. Romano el at, Gut microbiota-generated phenylacetylglutamine and heart failure, Circulation: Heart Failure, doi.org/10.1161/CIRCHEARTFAILURE.122.009972
     
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