Potential long consequences from internal and external ecology: loss of gut microbiota antifragility in children from an industrialized population compared with an indigenous rural lifestyle.

IF 1.8 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease Pub Date : 2023-08-01 Epub Date: 2023-05-24 DOI:10.1017/S2040174423000144
Isaac G-Santoyo, Elvia Ramírez-Carrillo, Jonathan Dominguez Sanchez, Oliver López-Corona
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Abstract

Human health is strongly mediated by the gut microbiota ecosystem, which, in turn, depends not only on its state but also on its dynamics and how it responds to perturbations. Healthy microbiota ecosystems tend to be in criticality and antifragile dynamics corresponding to a maximum complexity configuration, which may be assessed with information and network theory analysis. Under this complex system perspective, we used a new analysis of published data to show that a children's population with an industrialized urban lifestyle from Mexico City exhibits informational and network characteristics similar to parasitized children from a rural indigenous population in the remote mountainous region of Guerrero, México. We propose then, that in this critical age for gut microbiota maturation, the industrialized urban lifestyle could be thought of as an external perturbation to the gut microbiota ecosystem, and we show that it produces a similar loss in criticality/antifragility as the one observed by internal perturbation due to parasitosis by the helminth A. lumbricoides. Finally, several general complexity-based guidelines to prevent or restore gut ecosystem antifragility are discussed.

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内部和外部生态的潜在长期后果:与土著农村生活方式相比,工业化人口儿童肠道微生物群的丧失具有抗敏性。
人类健康在很大程度上是由肠道微生物群生态系统介导的,而肠道微生物群不仅取决于其状态,还取决于其动力学以及对扰动的反应。健康的微生物群生态系统往往处于临界状态,并具有与最大复杂性配置相对应的抗敏捷动态,这可以通过信息和网络理论分析进行评估。在这种复杂的系统视角下,我们使用对已发表数据的新分析表明,墨西哥城工业化城市生活方式的儿童群体表现出与墨西哥格雷罗偏远山区农村土著人口中的寄生儿童相似的信息和网络特征。然后,我们提出,在这个肠道微生物群成熟的关键年龄,工业化的城市生活方式可以被认为是对肠道微生物群生态系统的外部扰动,我们表明,它在临界性/抗敏性方面产生的损失与蠕虫寄生虫引起的内部扰动所观察到的损失相似。最后,讨论了几种基于复杂性的通用指南,以防止或恢复肠道生态系统的抗敏捷性。
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来源期刊
Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease
Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
145
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: JDOHaD publishes leading research in the field of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD). The Journal focuses on the environment during early pre-natal and post-natal animal and human development, interactions between environmental and genetic factors, including environmental toxicants, and their influence on health and disease risk throughout the lifespan. JDOHaD publishes work on developmental programming, fetal and neonatal biology and physiology, early life nutrition, especially during the first 1,000 days of life, human ecology and evolution and Gene-Environment Interactions. JDOHaD also accepts manuscripts that address the social determinants or education of health and disease risk as they relate to the early life period, as well as the economic and health care costs of a poor start to life. Accordingly, JDOHaD is multi-disciplinary, with contributions from basic scientists working in the fields of physiology, biochemistry and nutrition, endocrinology and metabolism, developmental biology, molecular biology/ epigenetics, human biology/ anthropology, and evolutionary developmental biology. Moreover clinicians, nutritionists, epidemiologists, social scientists, economists, public health specialists and policy makers are very welcome to submit manuscripts. The journal includes original research articles, short communications and reviews, and has regular themed issues, with guest editors; it is also a platform for conference/workshop reports, and for opinion, comment and interaction.
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