Literature DB >> 35258446

Personal diet-microbiota interactions and weight loss.

Henrik M Roager1, Lars H Christensen1.   

Abstract

The aim of this review is to provide an overview of how person-specific interactions between diet and the gut microbiota could play a role in affecting diet-induced weight loss responses. The highly person-specific gut microbiota, which is shaped by our diet, secretes digestive enzymes and molecules that affect digestion in the colon. Therefore, weight loss responses could in part depend on personal colonic fermentation responses, which affect energy extraction of food and production of microbial metabolites, such as short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), which exert various effects on host metabolism. Colonic fermentation is the net result of the complex interplay between availability of dietary substrates, the functional capacity of the gut microbiome and environmental (abiotic) factors in the gut such as pH and transit time. While animal studies have demonstrated that the gut microbiota can causally affect obesity, causal and mechanistic evidence from human studies is still largely lacking. However, recent human studies have proposed that the baseline gut microbiota composition may predict diet-induced weight loss-responses. In particular, individuals characterised by high relative abundance of Prevotella have been found to lose more weight on diets rich in dietary fibre compared to individuals with low Prevotella abundance. Although harnessing of personal diet-microbiota interactions holds promise for more personalised nutrition and obesity management strategies to improve human health, there is currently insufficient evidence to unequivocally link the gut microbiota and weight loss in human subjects. To move the field forward, a greater understanding of the mechanistic underpinnings of personal diet-microbiota interactions is needed.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Gut microbiome; Obesity; Personalised nutrition; Weight loss

Year:  2022        PMID: 35258446     DOI: 10.1017/S0029665122000805

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Nutr Soc        ISSN: 0029-6651            Impact factor:   6.297


  4 in total

1.  Interactions between Vitamin D Genetic Risk and Dietary Factors on Metabolic Disease-Related Outcomes in Ghanaian Adults.

Authors:  Buthaina E Alathari; David A Nyakotey; Abdul-Malik Bawah; Julie A Lovegrove; Reginald A Annan; Basma Ellahi; Karani S Vimaleswaran
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2022-07-04       Impact factor: 6.706

2.  The developing airway and gut microbiota in early life is influenced by age of older siblings.

Authors:  Emil Dalgaard Christensen; Mathis Hjort Hjelmsø; Morten Arendt Rasmussen; Jakob Stokholm; Jonathan Thorsen; Shiraz Shah; Tamsin Redgwell; Christina Egeø Poulsen; Urvish Trivedi; Jakob Russel; Shashank Gupta; Bo L Chawes; Klaus Bønnelykke; Søren Johannes Sørensen; Hans Bisgaard
Journal:  Microbiome       Date:  2022-07-13       Impact factor: 16.837

3.  Prevotella abundance and salivary amylase gene copy number predict fat loss in response to wholegrain diets.

Authors:  Lars Christensen; Mads F Hjorth; Lukasz Krych; Tine Rask Licht; Lotte Lauritzen; Faidon Magkos; Henrik M Roager
Journal:  Front Nutr       Date:  2022-08-22

Review 4.  The microbiota composition drives personalized nutrition: Gut microbes as predictive biomarkers for the success of weight loss diets.

Authors:  Paula Hernández-Calderón; Lara Wiedemann; Alfonso Benítez-Páez
Journal:  Front Nutr       Date:  2022-09-23
  4 in total

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