Intrinsic association between diet and the gut microbiome: current evidence.

IF 1.3 Q4 NUTRITION & DIETETICS Nutrition and Dietary Supplements Pub Date : 2015-01-01 Epub Date: 2015-10-07 DOI:10.2147/NDS.S62362
Kathryn Winglee, Anthony A Fodor
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The gut microbiome performs many crucial functions for the human host, but the molecular mechanisms by which host, microbe and diet interact to mediate health and disease are only starting to be revealed. Here we review the literature on how changes in the diet affect the microbiome. A number of studies have shown that within a geographic region, different diets (such as vegan vs. omnivore) are associated with differences in a modest number of taxa but do not reliably produce radical differences within the gut microbial community. In contrast, studies that look across continents consistently find profoundly different microbial communities between Westernized and traditional populations, although it remains unclear to what extent diet or other differences in lifestyle drive these distinct microbial community structures. Furthermore, studies that place subjects on controlled short term experimental diets have found the resulting alterations to the gut microbial community to generally be small in scope, with changes that do not overcome initial individual differences in microbial community structure. These results emphasize that the human gut microbial community is relatively stable over time. In contrast, short term changes in diet can cause large changes in metabolite profiles, including metabolites processed by the gut microbial community. These results suggest that commensal gut microbes have a great deal of genetic plasticity and can activate different metabolic pathways independent of changes to microbial community composition. Thus, future studies of the how diet impacts host health via the microbiome may wish to focus on functional assays such as transcriptomics and metabolomics, in addition to 16S rRNA and whole-genome metagenome shotgun analyses of DNA. Taken together, the literature is most consistent with a model in which the composition of the adult gut microbial community undergoes modest compositional changes in response to altered diet but can nonetheless respond very rapidly to dietary changes via up- or down-regulation of metabolic pathways that can have profound and immediate consequences for host health.

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饮食和肠道微生物群之间的内在联系:目前的证据。
肠道微生物组对人类宿主发挥着许多至关重要的功能,但宿主、微生物和饮食相互作用介导健康和疾病的分子机制才刚刚开始被揭示。在这里,我们回顾了关于饮食变化如何影响微生物组的文献。许多研究表明,在一个地理区域内,不同的饮食(如素食与杂食)与少数分类群的差异有关,但并不一定会在肠道微生物群落中产生根本差异。相比之下,跨大陆的研究一致发现,西化人群和传统人群之间的微生物群落存在巨大差异,尽管尚不清楚饮食或其他生活方式的差异在多大程度上驱动了这些不同的微生物群落结构。此外,对受试者进行控制的短期实验饮食的研究发现,肠道微生物群落的变化范围通常很小,这些变化不会克服微生物群落结构的初始个体差异。这些结果强调,随着时间的推移,人类肠道微生物群落相对稳定。相反,饮食的短期改变会导致代谢物谱的巨大变化,包括肠道微生物群落处理的代谢物。这些结果表明,共生肠道微生物具有很大的遗传可塑性,可以独立于微生物群落组成的变化而激活不同的代谢途径。因此,除了16S rRNA和DNA全基因组宏基因组霰弹枪分析外,未来关于饮食如何通过微生物组影响宿主健康的研究可能希望关注转录组学和代谢组学等功能分析。综上所述,这些文献与一个模型最为一致,在这个模型中,成年肠道微生物群落的组成随着饮食的改变而发生适度的变化,但仍然可以通过上调或下调代谢途径对饮食变化做出非常迅速的反应,这可能对宿主的健康产生深远而直接的影响。
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来源期刊
Nutrition and Dietary Supplements
Nutrition and Dietary Supplements NUTRITION & DIETETICS-
自引率
0.00%
发文量
3
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: Nutrition and Dietary Supplements is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal focusing on research into nutritional requirements in health and disease, impact on metabolism and the identification and optimal use of dietary strategies and supplements necessary for normal growth and development. Specific topics covered in the journal include: Epidemiology, prevalence of related disorders such as obesity, diabetes, dyslipidemias Biochemistry and cellular metabolism of nutrients Effect of nutrition on metabolic control Impact of hormones and genetics on nutrient handling Identification of cofactors and development of effective supplementation strategies Dietary strategies Behavior modification Consumer and patient adherence, quality of life Public Health Policy & Health Economics.
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