| Literature DB >> 34906176 |
Pooneh Angoorani1, Hanieh-Sadat Ejtahed2,3, Shirin Hasani-Ranjbar1, Seyed Davar Siadat4, Ahmad Reza Soroush1, Bagher Larijani5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intermittent fasting has been reported to have positive effects on obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, hypertension, and several neurodegenerative diseases through different mechanisms such as alteration in the gut microbiota. This systematic review was conducted with the aim of providing an overview of the existing animal and human literature regarding the gut microbiota alterations in various fasting regimens.Entities:
Keywords: Gut microbiota; Intermittent fasting; Metabolism; Microbiome; Ramadan fasting
Year: 2021 PMID: 34906176 PMCID: PMC8670288 DOI: 10.1186/s12986-021-00635-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutr Metab (Lond) ISSN: 1743-7075 Impact factor: 4.169
Fig. 1Flow diagram of studies identified
Summary of the animal studies investigating the effects of fasting on gut microbiota alterations
| First author, year | Animal model | Intervention | Biospecimen | Microbiota analyzing methods | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sonoyama K, 2009 | Male Syrian hamsters (age: 10 weeks) | 1. Fed active group (n = 6) | Cecum | 16S rRNA clone library and species-specific real-time quantitative PCR | ↑Akkermansia muciniphila, a mucin degrader, in fasting group but not in hibernation |
| 2. Fasted active, group (n = 6) fasted 96 h | ↑Clostridia in fed active and hibernating group | ||||
| 3. hibernating group (n = 6) maintaining darkness at 4 °C | |||||
| Kohl KD, 2014 | Fish, toads, geckos, quail, mice | Four time points through | Colon & cecum | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | In tilapia, quail, and mice: ↓Lactobacillus & Prevotella, ↑ Oscillospira |
| 28 days fasting | In tetrapods ↓ Coprobacillus & Ruminococcus | ||||
| Li G, 2017 | 7–8-week-old male C57BL/6 N mice: diet-induced obese model | 1. Controls: fed with ad libitum (AL) diet | Cecum | 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing | ↑Firmicutes, ↓ Bacteriodetes and Actinobacteria, ↑ Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes ratio |
| 2. Intermittent fasting (IF): every other day fasting (EODF) regimen | ↑ beiging of white adipose tissue and subsequently ameliorate metabolic disorders | ||||
| McCue MD, 2017 | Mice, quail, tilapia, toad, geckos | Mice (3 days fasting), quail (7 days fasting), tilapia & toad (21 days fasting), geckos (28daysfasting) | Feces | 16S rRNA sequencing | Alteration in Bacteriodetes, Firmicutes, Proteobacteria, Fusobacteria and Verrucomicrobia |
| Beli E, 2018 | 4-month-old db/m (non- diabetic) and db/db (diabetic) mice | 1. Controls: fed with ad libitum (AL) diet | Feces | 16S rRNA sequencing with the MiSeq platform | ↑ Firmicutes, ↓ Bacteroidetes and Verrucomicrobia, ↑gut mucin, goblet cell number, villi length |
| 2. IF: fasted on an every other 24-h interval for 7 months | ↓ plasma peptidoglycan, ↑ tauroursodeoxycholate bile acid ↓retinal TNF-α mRNA | ||||
| Catterson JH, 2018 | fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) | 1. Controls: fed with ad libitum | Blood and tissue | qPCR quantification of bacterial load | ↓age-related pathologies,↑ gut barrier function & gut health due to ↓relative bacterial abundance |
| 2. IF: 2-day fed,5-day fasted for 40 days | |||||
| Cignarella F, 2018 | 7- week- old Female C57BL/6 J mice: multiple sclerosis (MS) animal model | 1. Controls: fed with ad libitum (AL) diet (n = 10) | Feces | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | ↑ |
| 2. IF: fasted, fed every other day (n = 10) | ↑ketone formation and glutathione metabolism, ↑ anti-oxidative pathways, ↓IL-17 producing T cells & ↑the number of regulatory T cells ↓inflammation, demyelination and axonal damage | ||||
| Wei S, 2018 | 6-week-old male C57BL/ksJ-db (db/db) mice: a genetic model of type 2 diabetes | 1. Controls: standard chow, free access to food and water | Feces | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | ↑ Bacteroidetes, ↓Firmicutes & |
| 2. FMD: fasting with the (30% of the daily calorie intake of control group) for 1 week, followed by ad libitum feeding for another week | ↓ fasting blood glucose, ↓hepatic steatosis, ↓loss of pancreatic islets and β cells | ||||
| Kim JN, 2019 | Three ruminally cannulated Holstein steers | 1.Controls: the ruminal fluids 2 h after the morning | Rumen | Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis and quantitative polymerase chain reaction | ↓ |
| 2.Fasting: the ruminal fluids feeding and 24 h after fasting | |||||
| Li T, 2019 | Crucian Carp fish | 1. Controls: fed to satiation twice per day | Gut | 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing | In IF groups: ↑alpha diversity and ecosystem stability of gut microbiota |
| 2.IF: fasted for 5 days followed by 5 days of re-feeding | ↑ | ||||
| 3. Long term fasting (LF): not fed anything during the whole experimental period | In LF group: ↑ Proteobacteria, | ||||
| Miyamoto J, 2019 | Wild-type and Gpr43 − / − mice | 1.IF: alternating 24 h periods (15 cycles for 1 month) of free access to diet followed by 24 h fasting | Cecum | 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing | IF group: ↑Bacteroidetes& Verrucomicrobia |
| 2. Eucaloric ketogenic diet: ketogenic diets for 6 weeks | ↑total plasma ketone body ↓total plasma & cecal short chain fatty acids (SCFA) | ||||
| Park S, 2019 | Male Sprague Dawley rats: Alzheimer’s disease (AD) model | 1. Controls: normal diet | Feces | 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing | IF group: ↓ |
| 2. Ketogenic diet | Ketogenic group: ↑the relative counts of Proteobacteria especially | ||||
| 3. High carbohydrate diet | IF and high carbohydrate groups, but not ketogenic group: | ||||
| 4.IF: normal diet with intermittent fasting | ↓ the hippocampal amyloidβ deposition,↑ memory function | ||||
| Rangan P, 2019 | 8-weeks-old female C57BL/6 mice: inflammatory bowel diseases mouse model | 1. Controls: standard diet | Feces | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | FMD: ↑ Microbial strains associated with Tcell regulation and gut regeneration |
| 2. Fasting-mimicking diet (FMD): control diet plus 2 cycles of FMD | ↓ intestinal inflammation, ↑stem cell number, | ||||
| 3. water-only fasting (WF): control diet plus 2 cycles of WF | ↑ | ||||
| WF: ↑regenerative, ↓ inflammatory markers without reversing pathology | |||||
| Zhou ZH, 2019 | 6-week-old male C57BL/6 J mice Parkinson’s disease (PD) model | 1. Controls: normal diet (12 kcal/day) | feces | 16S and 18S rRNA gene sequencing | FMD: ↑ Firmicutes, Tenericutes, Opisthokonta, ↓Proteobacteria |
| 2. Fasting-mimicking diet (FMD) day 1: 50% of the standard daily calorie intake day 2–3: 10% of the standard daily calorie intake | ↑neuroprotective effect for PD | ||||
| Deng Y, 2020 | 3-week-old male C57BL/6 J mice:diet-induced obese model | 1.controls: fed with ad libitum (AL) diet (n = 15) | feces | 16S rDNA gene amplicon sequencing | ↑community diversity in gut flora |
| 2. IF: 24-h fasting for 30 days (n = 15) | ↓ Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes ratio | ||||
| ↑ | |||||
| ↓fat accumulation, ↑ white fat conversion to beige | |||||
| Li L, 2020 | 7-week-old male C57BL/6JLvri mice | 1. Controls: fed with ad libitum (AL) diet (n = 15) | Feces | next-generation sequencing | ↑level of |
| 2. IF: divided in 3 groups of fasting: 12, 16 and 20 h (n = 15 per group) | of 16S r RNA gene amplicons | ↓ cumulative food intake in the 16 and 20 h fasting groups | |||
| Liu Z, 2020 | homozygous Leprdb/db mice (diabetic), heterozygous Leprdb/m, mice (non- diabetic) | 1.controls: fed with ad libitum (AL) diet | Feces | 16S rRNA gene v3–v4 amplicon | ↑ villi length and the muscularis thickness. ↓ gut leakage, ↑cognitive function |
| 2. IF: deprived of food for 24 h for 28-day | Sequencing | ↑ microbiome alpha diversity | |||
| ↑ | |||||
| Ye Y, 2020 | 8-week-old male Kunming mice | 1. High-fat diet ad libitum | Feces | 16S rRNA gene V3–V4 | ↓ weight gain, ↓liver steatosis, ↓hepatic levels of triglycerides |
| 2. Time-restricted high-fat diet restricted to an 8-h temporal window per day for 8 weeks | Sequencing | ↑ Bacteroidetes | |||
| Zhang X, 2020 | 7–8 week –old male C57BL/6 mice: colitis mouse model | 1.Controls: standard diet | Feces | 16S rRNA gene | ADF, TRF & IER: ↑ |
| 2. Alternate-day fasting (ADF): 24 h feeding/fasting | sequencing | TRF and IER: ↓ | |||
| 3. Time restricted feeding (TRF): fed 8 h per day, fed at 24:00 p.m. and fasting at 8:00 a.m. in the morning | TRF and IER, but not ADF: ↓ | ||||
| 4. Intermittent energy fasting (IER): two cycles of four days of IER diet from day 11–14 and day 29–32 | ↑SCFAs generation-related microbes: | ||||
| IER but not TRF and ADF: ↓ | |||||
| Shi H, 2021 | 5 weeks old, WKY and SHRSP hypertensive stroke-prone rats | 1. Controls: ad libitum feeding 2.every other day fasting (EODF) group: alternating 24 h of ad libitum food access followed by 24 h fasting for 10 weeks | Cecum & plasma | Shotgun sequence analysis of the microbiota and untargeted metabolomics | ↑Bacteriodetes & Actinobacteria, ↓proteobacteria |
| ↑ microbial bile acid metabolism genes: 7α-dehydroxylase and bile salt hydrolase | |||||
| ↓ body weight & systolic blood pressure |
Summary of the human studies investigating the effects of fasting on gut microbiota alterations
| First author, year | Study design | Study Subjects | Intervention | Biospecimen | Microbiota analyzing methods | Main findings | Quality assessment score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Remely M, 2015 | Intervention pre-post design | 13 overweight individuals | One-week Buchinger fasting program* with laxative treatment followed by a 6 week intervention with a probiotic formula | Stool | 16srDNA with a quantitative real time polymerase chain reaction | No significant changes in total bacteria, or of Bacteroidetes | 1/5 |
| He Y, 2019 | Intervention pre-post design | 16 healthy individuals, Age: 18–40 years | six individuals subjected to a water-only fast and ten individuals receiving a juice fast, both for seven days | Stool | 16S ribosomal RNA gene | Water-only fasting changed the bacterial community, ↑more homogenous gut microbiomes, | 1/5 |
| Mesnage R, 2019 | Intervention pre-post design | 15 healthy men, Age: 18–70 years | 10 days Buchinger fasting program with daily energy intake of about 250 kcal and an enema every 2 days | Stool | 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing | ↓ | 1/5 |
| Ozkul C, 2019–2020** | Intervention pre-post design | 9 adult subjects | Ramadan fasting consisting of 17 h of fasting/day during a 29-day period | Stool | qPCR assay | ↑ | 1/5 |
| Stool | 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing | ↑Microbial richness. | 1/5 | ||||
| Balogh A, 2020 | Randomized controlled trial | Hypertensive metabolic syndrome patients 1.control (n = 36) 2.fasting (n = 35) | 1. Controls: Dietary Approach to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet. 2. Buchinger fasting protocol followed by DASH diet for 5 days | Stool | 16S rRNA sequencing or shotgun sequencing | ↑ | 3/5 |
| Gable K, 2020 | Intervention pre-post design | 14 obese adults | a daily 8-h time restricted feeding (8-h feeding window/ 16-h fasting window) for 12 weeks | Stool | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | Gut microbiota phylogenetic diversity remained unchanged. No significant alterations in any phyla | 1/5 |
| Lilja S, 2020 | Randomized controlled single-blinded trial | 154 healthy individuals 1.Buchinger fasting (n = 20) 2.fasting mimetic (n = 100) 3.control (n = 31) | 1.Buchinger fasting: 250 cal a day for 5 days 2.Fasting mimetic: routine diet with supplement of prebiotic and secondary plant ingredients 3 months 3.controls: placebo | Stool | Ilumnia sequencing and mass spectrometry | Buchinger fasting group: ↑distribution of Proteobacteria | 3/5 |
| Guo Y, 2021 | Randomized controlled trial | 39 patients with metabolic syndrome 1.control (n = 18) 2.fasting (n = 21) | "2-day" modified fasting (69% calorie reduction compared to non-fasting days) for 8 weeks | Stool | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | ↓fat mass, oxidative stress, inflammatory cytokines, ↑vasodilatory parameters. Significant changes in gut microbiota communities: ↑ | 3/5 |
| Maifeld A, 2021 | Randomized controlled trial | Hypertensive patients with metabolic syndrome 1.controls 2. fasting | 1. Controls: Dietary Approach to Stop Hypertension (DASH) 2. fasting: 2 days 1200 kcal/day, 5-days 300–350 kcal/day derived from vegetables followed by a modified DASH | Stool | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | ↓ | 3/5 |
| Su J, 2021 | Intervention pre-post design | Healthy non obese young and middle age individuals from two cohorts 1.fasting (n = 57; 27 middle age & 30 young) 2. age- & body weight–matched controls (n = 10) | Ramadan fasting consisting of 16 h of fasting/day during a 30-day period Control: routine diet/no fasting | Stool | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | 1/5 |
*Buchinger fasting program; Fat intake (g/d): 0.2, Protein intake (g/d): 1.8, Carbohydrate intake (g/d): 56.2, Fibre intake (g/d): 1.1, Energy intake (kcal/d): 234.4, Total fluid: 2–3 L per day
**Results are published in two articles
Fig. 2Effect of different types of fasting regimen on the gut microbiota composition and health parameters