Intrinsic association between diet and the gut microbiome: current evidence

Kathryn Winglee, Anthony A Fodor Department of Bioinformatics and Genomics, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC, USA Abstract: The gut microbiome performs many crucial functions for the human host, but the molecular mechanisms by which host, microbe, and diet interact to mediat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Winglee K, Fodor AA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2015-10-01
Series:Nutrition and Dietary Supplements
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/intrinsic-association-between-diet-and-the-gut-microbiome-current-evid-peer-reviewed-article-NDS
id doaj-0af062344f414e9e814008c58eae647a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0af062344f414e9e814008c58eae647a2020-11-24T22:10:34ZengDove Medical PressNutrition and Dietary Supplements1179-14892015-10-012015default697624040Intrinsic association between diet and the gut microbiome: current evidenceWinglee KFodor AAKathryn Winglee, Anthony A Fodor Department of Bioinformatics and Genomics, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC, USA Abstract: The gut microbiome performs many crucial functions for the human host, but the molecular mechanisms by which host, microbe, and diet interact to mediate health and disease are only starting to be revealed. Here, we review the literature on how changes in the diet affect the microbiome. A number of studies have shown that within a geographic region, different diets (such as vegan vs omnivore) are associated with differences in a modest number of taxa, but do not reliably produce radical differences within the gut microbial community. In contrast, studies that look across continents consistently find profoundly different microbial communities between Westernized and traditional populations, although it remains unclear to what extent diet or other differences in lifestyle drive these distinct microbial community structures. Furthermore, studies that place subjects on controlled short-term experimental diets have found the resulting alterations to the gut microbial community to generally be small in scope, with changes that do not overcome initial individual differences in microbial community structure. These results emphasize that the human gut microbial community is relatively stable over time. In contrast, short-term changes in diet can cause large changes in metabolite profiles, including metabolites processed by the gut microbial community. These results suggest that commensal gut microbes have a great deal of genetic plasticity and can activate different metabolic pathways independent of changes to microbial community composition. Thus, future studies of how the diet impacts host health via the microbiome may wish to focus on functional assays such as transcriptomics and metabolomics, in addition to 16S rRNA and whole-genome metagenome shotgun analyses of DNA. Taken together, the literature is most consistent with a model in which the composition of the adult gut microbial community undergoes modest compositional changes in response to altered diet but can nonetheless respond very rapidly to dietary changes via up- or downregulation of metabolic pathways that can have profound and immediate consequences for host health. Keywords: microbiome, transcriptomics, metabolomics, 16S rRNA, diethttps://www.dovepress.com/intrinsic-association-between-diet-and-the-gut-microbiome-current-evid-peer-reviewed-article-NDS
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Winglee K
Fodor AA
spellingShingle Winglee K
Fodor AA
Intrinsic association between diet and the gut microbiome: current evidence
Nutrition and Dietary Supplements
author_facet Winglee K
Fodor AA
author_sort Winglee K
title Intrinsic association between diet and the gut microbiome: current evidence
title_short Intrinsic association between diet and the gut microbiome: current evidence
title_full Intrinsic association between diet and the gut microbiome: current evidence
title_fullStr Intrinsic association between diet and the gut microbiome: current evidence
title_full_unstemmed Intrinsic association between diet and the gut microbiome: current evidence
title_sort intrinsic association between diet and the gut microbiome: current evidence
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Nutrition and Dietary Supplements
issn 1179-1489
publishDate 2015-10-01
description Kathryn Winglee, Anthony A Fodor Department of Bioinformatics and Genomics, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC, USA Abstract: The gut microbiome performs many crucial functions for the human host, but the molecular mechanisms by which host, microbe, and diet interact to mediate health and disease are only starting to be revealed. Here, we review the literature on how changes in the diet affect the microbiome. A number of studies have shown that within a geographic region, different diets (such as vegan vs omnivore) are associated with differences in a modest number of taxa, but do not reliably produce radical differences within the gut microbial community. In contrast, studies that look across continents consistently find profoundly different microbial communities between Westernized and traditional populations, although it remains unclear to what extent diet or other differences in lifestyle drive these distinct microbial community structures. Furthermore, studies that place subjects on controlled short-term experimental diets have found the resulting alterations to the gut microbial community to generally be small in scope, with changes that do not overcome initial individual differences in microbial community structure. These results emphasize that the human gut microbial community is relatively stable over time. In contrast, short-term changes in diet can cause large changes in metabolite profiles, including metabolites processed by the gut microbial community. These results suggest that commensal gut microbes have a great deal of genetic plasticity and can activate different metabolic pathways independent of changes to microbial community composition. Thus, future studies of how the diet impacts host health via the microbiome may wish to focus on functional assays such as transcriptomics and metabolomics, in addition to 16S rRNA and whole-genome metagenome shotgun analyses of DNA. Taken together, the literature is most consistent with a model in which the composition of the adult gut microbial community undergoes modest compositional changes in response to altered diet but can nonetheless respond very rapidly to dietary changes via up- or downregulation of metabolic pathways that can have profound and immediate consequences for host health. Keywords: microbiome, transcriptomics, metabolomics, 16S rRNA, diet
url https://www.dovepress.com/intrinsic-association-between-diet-and-the-gut-microbiome-current-evid-peer-reviewed-article-NDS
work_keys_str_mv AT wingleek intrinsicassociationbetweendietandthegutmicrobiomecurrentevidence
AT fodoraa intrinsicassociationbetweendietandthegutmicrobiomecurrentevidence
_version_ 1725807584439435264