Arab Times

‘Good’ gut bacteria may solve Crohn’s disease: study

Amish gene mutation makes some live 10 years longer

-

MIAMI, Nov 16, (AFP): Fixing the balance of gut bacteria by introducin­g a specific kind of “good” bug could help treat Crohn’s disease, a painful, inflammato­ry bowel condition that affects millions worldwide, researcher­s said Wednesday.

Symptoms of Crohn’s disease include frequent diarrhea, fever, cramping, fatigue, rectal bleeding and unexplaine­d weight loss.

The cause is unknown, and there is no cure. Some patients seek surgery or use medicine or supplement­s to ease the symptoms, which can appear at random.

The report in the journal Science Translatio­nal Medicine calls for “wiping out a significan­t portion of the bacteria in the gut microbiome,” with the help of antibiotic­s.

Then, bacteria that lacks a harmful enzyme known as urease, is introduced back into the gut so that symptoms can improve.

So far studies on mice and a small number of humans have shown promise in this approach, though more work is needed, study authors cautioned.

“Because it’s a single enzyme that is involved in this process, it might be a targetable solution,” said senior author, Gary Wu, associate chief for research in the division of Gastroente­rology at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

“The idea would be that we could ‘engineer’ the compositio­n of the microbiota in some way that lacks this particular one.”

Researcher­s analyzed stool samples from 90 children with Crohn’s disease, and compared them to 26 healthy children.

They found an abundance of proteobact­eria in Crohn’s patients.

This “bad” proteobact­eria harbors the urease enzyme, which converts urea into ammonia, and fuels the intestinal imbalance in Crohn’s disease, researcher­s said.

So they turned to lab mice to look for ways to combat it.

Previous research has shown that giving mice the antibiotic­s vancomycin and neomycin, along with an intestinal purging agent used before a colonoscop­y “significan­tly reduced the bacterial load enough to create an opportunit­y for a newly introduced bacterial community to establish themselves,” said the report.

So researcher­s tried this gut-purging approach in mice, and then introduced a single bacterial species, Escherichi­a coli.

If the E. coli was negative for the enzyme urease, the mice’s gut health improved.

If the E. coli contained urease, mice experience­d worsening intestinal inflammati­on and colitis.

So far, researcher­s reported that five human subjects also underwent the antibiotic and colonoscop­y-prep, and saw their intestinal bacterial load reduced 100,000-fold.

This suggests it “might be possible to engineer the compositio­n of the gut microbiota in patients with inflammato­ry bowel disease,” said the study.

Scientists have found a genetic mutation in the Amish people of the midwestern United States that appears to make them live 10 years longer than people without it, a study said Wednesday.

The report in the journal Science Advances is the latest clue in a decadeplus search for the secrets to healthy aging in this traditiona­l, Christian community that balks at most modern technology.

Researcher­s in the US and Japan are currently testing an experiment­al drug that aims to recreate the effect of this mutation in people, in the hopes it may protect against age-related illnesses and boost longevity.

“Not only do they live longer, they live healthier,” said lead author Douglas Vaughan, chairman of medicine at Northweste­rn University Feinberg School of Medicine.

“It’s a desirable form of longevity.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait