The Asian Age

How gut bacteria may up obesity risk

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London, Feb. 25: Scientists have identified how gut bacteria can increase the risk of obesity in some people. They found that ertain amino acids in our blood can be connected to both obesity and the compositio­n of the gut microbiome. A lot of the research on gut bacteria is based on animal studies which cannot be directly applied to humans. Also, a healthy gut flora for one person may not necessaril­y be good for someone else. However, an increasing number of research studies indicate that our gut microbiota does play an important role in our health. It affects our metabolism and can be linked to obesity, cardiovasc­ular disease and type 2 diabetes. Previous studies have shown that people with these diseases have varying occurrence of different metabolite­s, ie small molecules or metabolic residues, in the bloodstrea­m. Scientists from the Lund University in Sweden wanted to identify metabolite­s in the blood that can be linked to obesity ( high body mass index, BMI) and to investigat­e whether these obesity- related metabolite­s affect the compositio­n of the bacterial flora in stool samples. The researcher­s analysed blood plasma and stool samples from 674 participan­ts. They found 19 different metabolite­s that could be linked to the person’s BMI; glutamate and so- called BCAA ( branched- chain and aromatic amino acids) had the strongest connection to obesity. They also found that the obesity- related metabolite­s were linked to four different intestinal bacteria ( Blautia, Dorea and Ruminococc­us in the Lachnospir­aceae family, and SHA98). “The difference­s in BMI were largely explained by the difference­s in the levels of glutamate and BCAA. This indicates that the metabolite­s and gut bacteria interact, rather than being independen­t of each other,” said Marju OrhoMeland­er, professor at Lund University. By far the strongest risk factor for obesity in the study, glutamate, has been associated with obesity in previous studies, and BCAA has been used to predict the future onset of type 2 diabetes and cardiovasc­ular disease. “This means that future studies should focus more on how the compositio­n of gut bacteria can be modified to reduce the risk of obesity and associated metabolic diseases and cardiovasc­ular disease,” said Orho- Melander. “To get there, we first need to understand what a healthy normal gut flora looks like, and what factors impact the bacterial compositio­n,” she said.

They found as many as 19 different metabolite­s linked to the person’s BMI; glutamate and so- called BCAA ( branched- chain and aromatic amino acids)

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