Manipulating what kinds
of bacteria live in the gut might lead to a new way to treat millions of
children suffering chronic malnutrition, says new research that suggests the
right microbes can help get the most out of a poor diet.
Associated
Press report continues:
Researchers
culled intestinal bacteria from babies and toddlers in Malawi, where
malnutrition is a serious problem, and transferred them into mice for study.
Tweaking those gut microbes improved growth — even though the animals didn't
eat more, or more nutritiously.
We
share our bodies with trillions of bacteria, a customized set called a
microbiome that starts building at birth, and Thursday's work is the latest to
illustrate how crucial it is to develop a healthy one. Among the findings:
Certain nutrients in breast milk may help that happen.
"If
we could hammer home a key point, microbiota count," said Dr. Jeffrey
Gordon of Washington University in St. Louis, who led the series of experiments
published in the journals Science and Cell. "Building healthy gut
microbiota we think is important for health in the course of one's life."
Gut
bacteria do more than simply break down food for digestion. They synthesize
particular vitamins and micronutrients, and influence immune responses, for
example.
"A
healthy microbiome will allow us to access calories we might not have been able
to use before," explained Dr. Ilseung Cho, a gastroenterologist and gut
bacteria specialist at New York University School of Medicine, who wasn't
involved in the new work.
More
research is needed before testing the approach in children, but Cho said the
findings suggest there may be "very precise bacteria or very precise nutrient
interventions that can unlock the microbiome and help it combat
malnutrition."
While
providing special "therapeutic foods" and vitamin supplements helps
reduce deaths from malnutrition, Gordon said children still experience stunted
growth and neurodevelopmental problems. His team turned to Malawi, where
according to UNICEF almost half of children under 5 have growth stunted by
malnutrition. The researchers already suspected gut bacteria played a role,
based on previous research with pairs of Malawian twins, only some of whom were
affected.
This
time, working with more than 250 healthy or undernourished children, Gordon's
team defined how a healthy gut microbiome normally develops — and found that
the chronically malnourished tots harbored an immature one, too young for their
age.
Are
those abnormal gut bacteria a result of the kids' malnutrition, or could they
actually be contributing to it? To tell, the researchers transferred gut
bacteria from either healthy or malnourished tots into different sets of
germ-free baby mice, rodents born in sterile conditions so they lacked their
own intestinal microbes. They received a mouse version of the typical Malawian
diet, primarily corn flour with beans, peanuts and certain vegetables.
Despite
eating the same calories, mice with the healthy gut bacteria gained more lean
body mass, and showed healthier bone development and better metabolism in the
liver, brain and muscles, the team reported in Science.
"The
growth of these animals is markedly different," Gordon said.
Can
the unhealthy gut bacteria be repaired? The researchers switched up the cages
so some healthy mice could live with some unhealthy ones and, through that
yucky rodent trait of eating feces, trade their gut bacteria. Sure enough, some
microbes the team had identified as particularly healthy invaded the intestines
of the undernourished mice — and prevented their growth impairment. Two bugs
with tongue-twisting names — Ruminococcus gnavus and Clostridium symbiosum —
seemed key.
In
the U.S., doctors sometimes perform fecal transplants to alter the gut bacteria
of patients suffering certain intestinal diseases. When it comes to
malnutrition, the goal would be to build healthy gut bacteria from the start.
So
the researchers next looked at babies' first food — breast milk — and found
certain nutrients may play a role in how their microbiome develops.
Breast
milk from the mothers of the healthy Malawian babies harbors higher levels of
sugars containing sialic acid, a nutrient linked to brain development, the team
reported in Cell.
Using
a version of those sugars made from cow's milk, the researchers once again put
gut bacteria from malnourished children into mice and supplemented some of the
rodents' diets with the sugars. Sure enough, the supplemented mice grew better.
Repeating the experiment with piglets showed the same benefit.
It's not extra calories,
Gordon stressed. Different strains of bacteria were interacting at different
stages of the sugars' digestion, pointing to what he calls a complex food web
in the gut.
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