Toronto Star

Trust your gut — it may soon help explain whatever ails you

Recent advances in gene sequencing have helped researcher­s link internal bacteria to many illnesses

- KATRINA CLARKE STAFF REPORTER

Have acne? Could be your gut. Crohn’s disease? PTSD? Obesity? Could be your gut. The gut microbiome — trillions of bacteria in your gastrointe­stinal tract — has everyone from immunologi­sts to gut-health nuts excited about what problems it could explain, or solve, about their health.

Researcher­s are pumping out new studies linking the gut bacteria makeup to everything from asthma to irritable bowel syndrome, and laypeople obsessed with their guts eagerly await the next study explaining all that ails them.

Experts, however, caution that a larger body of research is needed before the extent of the significan­ce is known.

Dr. Ken Croitoru, a professor of medicine and im- munology at the University of Toronto and of gastroente­rology at Mount Sinai Hospital, said advances in gene sequencing have created the enthusiasm for future discoverie­s.

This sequencing “revolution” allows researcher­s to understand the community of bacteria within a DNA sample, he explained.

“We can catalogue what’s in there and . . . see how the makeup of the bacteria in a given sample from someone who’s got a disease is different from someone who’s healthy,” Croitoru said. “This is where all the excitement starts.

“It’s hugely exciting whenever you’re at the forefront of things,” he added. “Hopefully we’ll get some discoverie­s that will be paradigm shifting.”

For the past decade, researcher­s have been trying to pinpoint the specific roles the microbiome play in preventing disease and boosting immune systems. Once more is known, experts say the implicatio­ns for illness prevention and treatment are boundless. But they aren’t there yet. Researcher­s have yet to discover what makes up a “normal” gut microbiome. They’re overwhelme­d by the amount of microbiome data collected and by how to best analyze it, Croitoru said.

“We’re still not sure what it’s trying to tell us,” he said. “The real question is . . . if we’ll be able to take this informatio­n at some point down the road and say, ‘Aha, this abnormalit­y in this community describes someone who is at risk for developing inflammato­ry bowel disease, for example, and . . . develop a strategy that would change that abnormal microbial makeup.’ ”

Croitoru estimates researcher­s are five to 10 years away from establishi­ng scientific­ally supported methods of how to change the microbiome to fight or prevent disease. Good for your gut In the past 15 years, researcher­s have discovered a diverse and richer gut microbiome is better than one with less bacterial diversity.

“What’s shifted is our understand­ing that not all bacteria are harmful,” said Dr. Vincent Pedre, a New-York based medical doctor and functional medicine specialist and the author of the book Happy Gut.

“(Good gut health) is about promoting the growth and presence of good bacteria.”

A study released last year examining the microbiome of an “uncontacte­d” Amazonian indigenous tribe that ate a high-fibre diet, found the community had the most diverse microbiome­s researcher­s had ever seen. They appeared to be healthy without obesity or metabolic diseases, though some experts caution it’s too early to read much into those findings.

Good bacteria promotion can come from eating fibre, probiotics, such as yogurt and kefir, or even from exposure to dogs and dirt, experts say.

“Dirt does not equal disease,” said Marie-Claire Arrieta, a post-doctoral fellow at the Michael Smith Lab at the University of British Columbia and co-author of the book Let them Eat Dirt, out in September. “That does not mean that I should be licking surfaces of a mall or of a subway . . . but that does mean that we shouldn’t be . . . disinfecti­ng everything that a kid touches early on in life.”

Microbiome compositio­n changes throughout life, but the first 100 days of life are most important for microbiome developmen­t, said Arrieta.

In the womb, babies are “sterile,” so they first accumulate bacteria when travelling through the birth canal and continue to build their microbiome “ecosystem” through contact with surfaces, people, animals and other environmen­ts, she said.

Babies putting their hands and feet in their mouths may even be an evolutiona­ry function that helps get environmen­tal bacteria into their guts, she said.

It takes about three years for the microbiome foundation to be establishe­d, she said. Building a diverse microbiome Antibiotic­s, while potentiall­y lifesaving, can be problemati­c for the microbiome.

“When you take an antibiotic, it’s not that it’s like a targeted missile, going in to shoot the (bacteria causing an infection), it’s more like a carpet bomb that is going to kill that one and a whole bunch of others,” said Arrieta, who supports use of antibiotic­s to treat illnesses but said use can detrimenta­lly affect microbiome diversity.

Studies have shown that use of antibiotic­s, particular­ly in childhood, may contribute to increased incidences of certain diseases such as Crohn’s disease or inflammato­ry bowel disease.

“At the same time polio and measles and all these nasty diseases have decreased, there’s been an equal increase in chronic immune-mediated diseases, so diabetes, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, even autism, asthma — diseases that have only popped up in the last two generation­s,” she said. “What the evidence is pointing towards is that it’s the microbes within us that is driving that change.”

Researcher­s also know that babies born by Caesarian section face obstacles in building a diverse microbiome as they don’t receive the same rich bacteria vaginally born babies do. Studies are currently focusing on how to boost the microbiome of C-section babies. Hopes on the horizon As the body of evidence grows, researcher­s will likely learn more scientific-based details about how the microbiome is linked to disease. This could lead to major discoverie­s in treating and preventing diseases, Croitoru said.

Researcher­s hope that more physicians will start prescribin­g probiotics — which help repopulate good bacteria — alongside antibiotic­s. They’re also optimistic advances in probiotic research will get more effective probiotic supplement­s and products on the market.

“There needs to be a balance of prevention of infection and promotion of microbes that are associated with health,” Arrieta said.

Arrieta adds that hyper-hygienic practices have to change.

“I do hope that as more informatio­n from this field of science reaches the general population, people will begin to understand the overwhelmi­ng advantages of not being hyperhygie­nic, especially during the childhood years,” she said.

 ?? BEN NELMS FOR THE TORONTO STAR ?? Marie-Claire Arrieta, a post-doctoral fellow at the University of British Columbia, says the first 100 days of life are most important for developing helpful gut bacteria.
BEN NELMS FOR THE TORONTO STAR Marie-Claire Arrieta, a post-doctoral fellow at the University of British Columbia, says the first 100 days of life are most important for developing helpful gut bacteria.

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