| Literature DB >> 32326604 |
Małgorzata Moszak1, Monika Szulińska1, Paweł Bogdański1.
Abstract
The gut microbiota (GM) is defined as the community of microorganisms (bacteria, archaea, fungi, viruses) colonizing the gastrointestinal tract. GM regulates various metabolic pathways in the host, including those involved in energy homeostasis, glucose and lipid metabolism, and bile acid metabolism. The relationship between alterations in intestinal microbiota and diseases associated with civilization is well documented. GM dysbiosis is involved in the pathogenesis of diverse diseases, such as metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular diseases, celiac disease, inflammatory bowel disease, and neurological disorders. Multiple factors modulate the composition of the microbiota and how it physically functions, but one of the major factors triggering GM establishment is diet. In this paper, we reviewed the current knowledge about the relationship between nutrition, gut microbiota, and host metabolic status. We described how macronutrients (proteins, carbohydrates, fat) and different dietary patterns (e.g., Western-style diet, vegetarian diet, Mediterranean diet) interact with the composition and activity of GM, and how gut bacterial dysbiosis has an influence on metabolic disorders, such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, and hyperlipidemia.Entities:
Keywords: Western-style diet; diabetes; diet; dyslipidemia; gut microbiota; metabolic disorders; obesity; short-chain fatty acid; vegetarian
Year: 2020 PMID: 32326604 PMCID: PMC7230850 DOI: 10.3390/nu12041096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Influence of digestible and non-digestible carbohydrates on gut microbiota (GM).
| Reference | Study Type | Population | Dietary Sources of Carbohydrate | Influence on Gut Microbiota |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fehlbaum et al. 2018 [ | in vitro study | screening platform (i-screen) inoculated with adult fecal microbiota | a different source of dietary fiber (DF): FOS (chicory root), inulin (chicory root), alpha-GOS (peas), beta-GOS (lactose), XOS-C (corn cobs), XOS-S (sugar cane fiber), and β-glucan (oat flour) | β-glucan induced ↑ |
| Do et al. 2018 [ | animal experimental study | eight-weeks-old male C57BL/6J mice ( | normal diet (ND), HGD (high glucose diet), HFrD (high fructose diet), or HFD (high-fat diet) for 12 weeks | HGD and HFrD caused ↑ |
| Sen et al. 2011 [ | animal experimental study | Sprague-Dawley rat ( | HF/HSD, LF/HSD, or control low-fat/low-sugar diet (LF/LSD) | HF/HSD and LF/HSD-fed caused gut microbiota dysbiosis (↑ |
| Whelan et al. 2005 [ | a randomized, double-blind, crossover trial | healthy subjects ( | standard enteral formula vs. formula supplemented with FOS (5.1 g/L) and fiber (8.9 g/L) as a sole source of nutrition | FOS/fiber formula led to ↑ |
| Martinez et al. 2010 [ | a double-blind, crossover trial | heathy human ( | crackers containing either RS2 (resistant starch type 2), RS4, or native stRS types 2 (RS2) and 4 (RS4) | RS4 but not RS2 induced significantly, reversible ↑ |
| Davis et al. 2011 [ | single-blinded study | healthy human subjects ( | GOS-containing products with four doses (0, 2.5, 5, and 10 g GOS) | ↑ |
| Walker et al., 2011 [ | randomized crossover trial | overweight adult men ( | HRSD (high in resistant starch diet), NPS (diet high in non-starch polysaccharides), WL (reduced CHO diet) vs. control diet | HRSD ↑ |
| Francavilla et al. 2012 [ | observational prospective study | infants with cow’s milk allergy vs. control ( | formula with no lactose for 2 months followed by an identical lactose-containing formula for an additional 2 months | ↑ |
| Hald et al. 2016 [ | randomized crossover study | adults with metabolic syndrome ( | a diet enriched with AX (arabinoxylan) and RS2 (resistant starch type 2) vs. low-fiber Western-style diet | AX, RS2 caused ↓ total species diversity, ↑ heterogeneity of bacterial communities both between and within subjects, induced ↑ |
| Nicolucci et al. 2017 [ | double-blind, randomized placebo-controlled trial | children ( | oligofructose-enriched inulin (OI); 8 g/day; | ↓ body weight z-score (3.1%), percent body fat (2.4%), percent trunk fat (3.8%), and IL-6, TG level in OI group |
| Mardinoglu et al. 2018 [ | short-term intervention study | obese subjects with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease ( | isocaloric low-CHOs diet (30 g/d) with increased protein content by 14 days | rapid reduction (after 24 h) of fiber-degrading bacteria, ↑ |
| Jones et al. 2019 [ | observational prospective study | obese Hispanic adolescent (12–19 years) ( | the mean daily intakes of energy, fiber, protein, fat, CHO, sugars, and fructose assessment with the use of 24-h diet recall | high fructose in the diet was associated with ↓ |
Alpha-linked galactooligosaccharides (alpha-GOS), arabinoxylan (AX, beta-linked galactooligosaccharides (beta-GOS), carbohydrates (CHOs), dietary fiber (DF), HFD (high-fat diet), HFrD (high fructose diet), HGD (high glucose diet), HRSD (high in resistant starch diet), oligofructose-enriched inulin (OI), short chain fatty acid (SCFA), xylooligosaccharides from corn cobs (XOS-C), xylooligosaccharides from sugar cane fiber (XOS-S), normal diet (ND), a diet high in non-starch (NPS).
Influence of different sources of proteins on GM.
| Reference | Dietary Sources of Proteins | Study Type | Population | Influence on Gut Microbiota |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meddah et al. 2001 [ | whey protein, | in vitro study | simulator of the human intestinal microbial ecosystem (SHIME) | increased |
| Świątecka et al. 2011 [ | glycated pea protein | in vitro study | batch-type simulator models imitating human intestinal conditions | increased |
| Zhu et al. 2015 [ | red meat (beef and pork), white meat (chicken and fish), and other sources (casein and soy) | animal experimental study | male Sprague-Dawley rats 3 wk old ( | protein type in diets had a significant effect on gut bacteria in the caecum |
| Butteiger et al. 2016 [ | soy protein vs. milk protein (MPI) | animal experimental study | 6- to 8-week-old, male Golden Syrian hamsters ( | reduced abundance of |
| Zhou et al. 2018 [ | buckwheat protein | animal experimental study | male C57BL/6 mice ( | increased |
Influence of lipids on GM.
| Reference | Study Type | Population | Dietary Sources of Lipids | Influence on Gut Microbiota |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caesar et al. 2015 [ | animal experimental study | Trif(−/−) and Myd88(−/−) mice ( | isocaloric diets (45% kcal fat) of the identical composition except for the source of fat—lard vs. fish oil | increased |
| Devkota et al. 2012 [ | animal experimental study | Il10 −/− mice ( | milk fat (MF), lard fat (LF), or polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) test diets | MF but not PUFAs promoted |
| Bamberger et al. 2018 [ | randomized, controlled, prospective, cross-over study | healthy Caucasian subjects ( | walnut-enriched diet (43 g/day) vs. a nut-free diet | walnut consumption increased abundance of |
| Tindall et al. 2019 [ | randomized, crossover, controlled-feeding trial | adults at CVD risk ( | 2-week standard Western diet (SWD) run-in and three 6-wk isocaloric diets: | WD: the most abundant was Eubacterium eligens group, Lachnospiraceae, Lachnospiraceae, and Leuconostocaceae |
α-Linolenic acid (ALA), cardiovascular disease (CVD), lard fat (LF), milk fat (MF), oleic acid diet (ORAD), polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), standard Western diet (SWD), whole walnuts diet (WD), walnuts free diet (WFMD; 2.6% ALA).
Influence of selected dietary factors on GM.
| Factor | Reference | Study Type | Population | Diet | Influence on Gut Microbiota |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iron | Jaeggi et al. 2015 [ | double-blind, randomized controlled trial | 6-month-old Kenyan infants ( | home-fortified maize porridge (12.5 mg Fe/daily) | adversely affected the GM, increased pathogen abundance and intestinal inflammation |
| Iron | Zimmermann et al. 2010 [ | randomized, double-blind, controlled trial, | 6–14-year-old Ivorian children ( | iron-fortified biscuits, which contained 20 mg Fe/d, 4 times/wk as electrolytic iron or non-fortified biscuits | iron: increased |
| Iron | Mahalhal et al. 2018 [ | animal experimental study | adult female C57BL/6 mice with/without DSS-induced colitis | chow diets containing either 100, 200, or 400 ppm iron | dietary iron at 400 ppm resulted in a significant reduction in the fecal abundance of |
| Vitamin D | Waterhouse et al. 2019 [ | systematic review | mice study ( | diets containing different levels of vitamin D (usually high versus low) | increase in |
| Vitamin D | Naderpoor et al. 2019 [ | a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial | 26 vitamin D-deficient overweight or obese healthy adults | 100,000 UI of cholecalciferol/d followed by 4000 IU/d or placebo | higher abundance of genus Lachnospira, and lower genus Blautia in the supplemented group |
| Vitamin D | Charoenngam et al. 2020 [ | a randomized, double-blind, dose-response study | adults with vitamin D deficiency ( | 600, 4000, or 10,000 IUs/day of oral vitamin D3 | baseline serum 25(OH)D was associated with an increased relative abundance of |
| Alcohol | Wang et al. 2018 [ | animal experimental study | female BALB/c mice (6 weeks old) ( | bottle with increasing alcohol concentration (3%, 6%, 10%, | higher microbial diversity |
| Alcohol | Litwinowicz et al. 2020 [ | systematic review | studies investigating intestinal microbiome alterations in individuals with alcohol use disorder (AUD) ( | depletion of | |
| Alcohol | Addolorato et al. 2020 [ | prospective, case-control, study | alcohol use disorder (AUD) patients ( | active drinkers vs. non-drinkers | decreased microbial alpha diversity in AUD |
| Coffee | Vitaglione et al. 2019 [ | animal experimental study | C57BL/6J mice ( | standard diet, a high-fat diet (HFD), or an HFD plus decaffeinated coffee (HFD + COFFEE) | HFD + COFFEE increased abundance of |
| Coffee | Jaquet et al. 2009 [ | interventional study | healthy adult volunteers ( | 3 cups of coffee/day | increase in the metabolic activity and/or numbers of the |
| Green tea | Seo et al. 2017 [ | animal experimental study | C57BL/6J mice ( | fermented green tea | reduced |
| Green tea | Liu et al. 2019 [ | animal experimental study | C57BL/6J mice ( | HFD with 1% water extracts of green tea, oolong tea, and black tea | green tea: reduced plasma LPS, |
| Green tea | Yuan et al. 2018 [ | interventional study | healthy volunteers ( | green tea liquid (GTL), (400 mL per day) | irreversibly, increase in |
| Pu-erh tea | Huang et al. 2019 [ | an interventional, case-control study | human subjects | 50 mg/kg/day for human subjects and 450 mg/kg/day for mice of Pu-erh tea | reduced |
| Salt | Bier et al. 2018 [ | animal experimental study | Dahl salt-sensitive rats, | normal diet (0.5% NaCl) vs. HSD (4% NaCl) for 8 weeks | HSD: an increased abundance of taxa from the Erwinia genus ( |
| Salt | Miranda PM et al. 2018 [ | animal experimental study | six- to eight-week-old specific pathogen-free (SPF) male C57BL/6 mice | normal diet vs. HSD (4% NaCl) for 4 weeks | HSD: reduced |
| Salt | Wang et al. 2017 [ | animal experimental study | C57BL/6J mice | low- or high-salt diets (HSD) (0.25 vs. 3.15% NaCl) | HSD increased |
| Salt | Wilck et al. 2017 [ | animal experimental study | 10-week-old, male C57BL6/J mice | normal salt (0.5% sodium) or high-salt diet (4% sodium + 1% in drinking water) ad libitum | HSD created a distinct gut microbiome composition compared to the normal-salt diet (analysis of Jensen-Shannon divergence). |
Alcohol use disorder (AUD), green tea liquid (GTL), high-fat diet (HFD), high-salt diet (HSD), liposaccharides (LPS), short chain fatty acids (SCFAs), specific pathogen-free (SPF).
Influence of selected dietary patterns on GM.
| Reference | Study Type | Population | Diet | Influence on Gut Microbiota |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Genoni et al. 2019 [ | cross-sectional comparative study | long-term (>1 year) (adult followers of a Paleolithic diet (PD) ( | long-term Paleolithic diet (PD) vs. typical national recommendation (CD) | PD was associated with a higher abundance of TMA-producing |
| Barone et al. 2019 [ | cross-sectional comparative study | healthy Italian subjects ( | modern Paleolithic diet (MPD) | MPD was associated with the greater relative abundance of asaccharolytic bacteria (i.e., |
| Hansen et al. 2018 [ | randomized, controlled, cross-over trial | healthy (non-celiac) adult Danish subjects ( | low-gluten diet (LGD) (2 g/d) vs. high-gluten diet (HGD) (18 g/d) | LGD reduced |
| Bonder et al. 2016 [ | observational study | healthy volunteers ( | gluten-free diet (GFD) | GFD decreased |
| Özkul et al. 2019 [ | pilot observational study | healthy adult men ( | Islamic fasting (IF) (17 h of fasting/day for 29 days) | IF increased abundance of |
| Xie et al. 2017 [ | interventional study | children with drug-resistant epilepsy ( | ketogenic diet (KD) | KD decreased the phylum |
| Spinelli et al. 2018 [ | interventional study | children with resistant epilepsy ( | ketogenic diet (KD) | KD caused an overall decrease in the mean species diversity, |
Casual diet (CD), islamic fasting (IF), gluten-free diet (GFD), high-gluten diet (HGD), ketogenic diet (KD), low-gluten diet (LGD), Mediterranean diet (MD), modern paleolithic diet (MPD), paleolithic diet (PD), trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO).