Gut bacteria can help to predict how the body will respond to fatty foods

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A greasy fried breakfast, consisting of two eggs, a sausage, beans, mushrooms, tomato and toast

Chemical signatures from gut bacteria which show up in urine can be used to predict how the body will respond to a 'junk' diet.

Scientists have found that certain compounds, produced by microbes in the guts of mice, could be used to show which animals are at greater risk of becoming obese or developing health conditions such as diabetes or cardiovascular disease.

The group, led by scientists at Imperial College London and INSERM UMRS 1138 in Paris, tested the urine of mice for a number of these microbial compounds, finding that certain key chemical signatures could accurately predict how the animals would respond to a high-fat diet before they received it.

According to the researchers, the findings are another crucial piece of the puzzle in how the microbiome – the ecosystem of bacteria living in our digestive tracts – helps to shape our health, and could lead to personalised diets for patients based on the makeup of their gut flora.

High-fat diets are a major driver of obesity and related health conditions, such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease. However, evidence from previous studies suggests different people eating the same high-fat diet may have different outcomes, making it hard to define a one-size-fits-all 'healthy diet'.

These findings open up really strong perspectives into designing personalised diets and harnessing our gut bacteria to promote health

– Dr Marc-Emmanuel Dumas

Lead author

Previous research has shown that the hundreds of species of bacteria and other microbes which inhabit our gut work with our own cells to carry out a number of roles, and that this microbial garden can be shaped by what we eat or what medicines we take, such as antibiotics.

In the latest study, published in Cell Reports, researchers used genetically similar mice to highlight the role that gut bacteria played in how the body responds to changes in diet and the impacts on health.

“We know that our environment and genetics can influence our risk of obesity and disease, but the effects of these communities of bacteria living inside us are less well understood,” said Dr Marc-Emmanuel Dumas, from the Department of Surgery & Cancer at Imperial, who led the research. “By using a group of mice with the same genetic makeup, we were able to zoom in on the variability in animals switched to a high-fat diet.”

Bacterial calling cards

Before animals switched diets, their urine was screened for compounds produced by their gut bacteria using magnetic resonance spectroscopy, giving the mice a profile of chemical signatures generated by metabolites from their microbiomes.

The team found that once the mice were switched to the same high-fat diet they had a range of outcomes, with some animals gaining more weight than others or becoming less tolerant to glucose – one of the early warning signs of diabetes.

Escherichia coli is just one of the many species of bacteria in the human gut

Escherichia coli (pictured) is just one of the many species of bacteria in the human gut

Analysis revealed that key chemical signatures in their urine were predictive of some outcomes, such as changes in behaviour, weight gain and tolerance to glucose. One compound in particular, trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO), was shown to be predictive of glucose tolerance.

Professor Jeremy Nicholson, Head of the Department of Surgery & Cancer at Imperial explained: "When the microbiome develops in early life, we start off with very few bugs, acquiring more bacteria from our environment as we develop. This means that small differences in the local environment can result in a great diversity in terms of the microbiome."

“This study is another fascinating example of the power of the microbiome to influence the host with respect to major health risks,” said Professor Nicholson. “It shows that value of a diet is determined not only by your genes, but also the genes of your gut microbes. This work has implications in lots of different areas, which is why it's so exciting.”

Mircobes driving adaptation

Senior investigator on the study, Dr Dominique Gauguier, from INSERM-Paris and a visiting professor at Imperial, added: “We tend to believe that obesity is caused by bad genes or by bad genes interacting with bad environment. Our findings indicate that an organism’s gut microbiome can drive the adaptation to dietary challenges in the absence of genetic variation. They underline the need for deeper physiological and molecular phenotyping of individuals in large scale genetic studies.”

This study is another fascinating example of the power of the microbiome to influence the host with respect to major health risks

– Professor Jeremy Nicholson

Head of the Department of Surgery & Cancer

The findings will be explored further as part of an ongoing large clinical trial of 2,000 patients, where details of their lifestyle, diet, medication and other factors, as well as their microbiomes, are being characterised.

Pulling together all of these data, and building on previous findings, they will be able to reveal how people react to different diets, and how their microbiomes influence the outcome.

According to the researchers, the hope is that in future, a patient’s profile could be generated from urine and blood samples and used to predict which diet they will respond to best.

“Our findings reveal that measuring metabolites in urine before the diet switch, we can predict which animals will get fat and become intolerant to glucose and which ones won’t,” added Dr Dumas. “These findings open up really strong perspectives into designing personalised diets and harnessing our gut bacteria to promote health.”

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Microbial-host co-metabolites are prodromal markers predicting phenotypic heterogeneity in behaviour, obesity, and impaired glucose tolerance’ by Dumas, M. et al, is published in Cell Reports.  

Image: Escherichia coli: Scanning electron micrograph of Escherichia coli, grown in culture and adhered to a cover slip.  Rocky Mountain Laboratories, NIAID, NIH / Creative Commons

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Ryan O'Hare

Ryan O'Hare
Communications Division

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Tel: +44 (0)20 7594 2410
Email: r.ohare@imperial.ac.uk

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