| Literature DB >> 33440171 |
Ceylan Tanes1, Kyle Bittinger1, Yuan Gao2, Elliot S Friedman3, Lisa Nessel2, Unmesha Roy Paladhi2, Lillian Chau3, Erika Panfen3, Michael A Fischbach4, Jonathan Braun5, Ramnik J Xavier6, Clary B Clish7, Hongzhe Li2, Frederic D Bushman8, James D Lewis9, Gary D Wu10.
Abstract
Gut microbiota metabolites may be important for host health, yet few studies investigate the correlation between human gut microbiome and production of fecal metabolites and their impact on the plasma metabolome. Since gut microbiota metabolites are influenced by diet, we performed a longitudinal analysis of the impact of three divergent diets, vegan, omnivore, and a synthetic enteral nutrition (EEN) diet lacking fiber, on the human gut microbiome and its metabolome, including after a microbiota depletion intervention. Omnivore and vegan, but not EEN, diets altered fecal amino acid levels by supporting the growth of Firmicutes capable of amino acid metabolism. This correlated with relative abundance of a sizable number of fecal amino acid metabolites, some not previously associated with the gut microbiota. The effect on the plasma metabolome, in contrast, were modest. The impact of diet, particularly fiber, on the human microbiome influences broad classes of metabolites that may modify health.Entities:
Keywords: dietary fiber, vegan, omnivore, amino acid; enteral nutrition; metabolome; microbiome
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33440171 PMCID: PMC8022197 DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2020.12.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Host Microbe ISSN: 1931-3128 Impact factor: 21.023