首页> 外文期刊>Frontiers in Microbiology >Association between Yogurt Consumption and Intestinal Microbiota in Healthy Young Adults Differs by Host Gender
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Association between Yogurt Consumption and Intestinal Microbiota in Healthy Young Adults Differs by Host Gender

机译:健康年轻人中酸奶摄入量与肠道菌群的相关性因寄主性别而异

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Human intestinal microbiota are influenced by various factors viz. diet, environment, age, gender, geographical, and socioeconomic situation, etc. among which diet has the most profound impact. However, studies investigating this impact have mostly included subjects from diverse geographic/socioeconomic backgrounds and hence the precise effects of dietary factors on gut microbiota composition remain largely confounded. Herein, with an aim to evaluate the association between dietary habits, specifically yogurt consumption, and the gut microbiota in healthy young adults sharing similar age, lifestyle routine, geographical setting, etc., we conducted a cross-sectional study wherein 293 collegiate freshmen answered a questionnaire about their frequency of yogurt consumption over the last 2 months and provided stool specimens for microbiota analysis. Fecal microbiota were analyzed by highly sensitive reverse-transcription-quantitative-PCR assays targeting bacterial 16S rRNA molecules. Fecal organic acids were measured by HPLC. Overall, the gut microbiota were predominated (97.1 ± 8.6%) by Clostridium coccoides group, Clostridium leptum subgroup, Bacteroides fragilis group, Bifidobacterium and Atopobium cluster. Interestingly, after adjusting the data for yogurt consumption, females were found to have higher total bacterial ( P = 0.013) and Bifidobacterium ( P = 0.046) count and fecal pH ( P = 0.007) and lower fecal concentration of total organic acids ( P = 0.030), succinic acid ( P = 0.007) and formic acid ( P = 0.046) as compared to males. Altogether, yogurt consumption showed positive linear association with Lactobacillus and Lactobacillus gasseri subgroup in both male and female subjects; however, several gender-specific disparities were also detected in this yogurt-microbiota association. Yogurt consumption demonstrated a negative association with L. sakei subgroup, Enterobacteriaceae and Staphylococcus in males but shared a positive association with L. casei subgroup and succinic acid in female subjects. The study manifests the association between yogurt consumption and gut microbiota in a healthy homogeneous cohort and show how this association can differ by host gender. The findings should be helpful for prospective studies investigating the diet–microbiome interaction in human health and disease.
机译:人肠微生物群受多种因素影响。饮食,环境,年龄,性别,地理和社会经济状况等,其中饮食影响最深。但是,研究这种影响的研究主要包括来自不同地理/社会经济背景的受试者,因此,饮食因素对肠道菌群组成的精确影响仍然很混乱。在本文中,为了评估饮食习惯(特别是酸奶的摄入量)和健康的成年人(具有相似的年龄,生活方式,地理位置等)之间的关联,我们进行了一项横断面研究,其中293名大学新生回答了一份关于他们最近2个月内酸奶消费频率的问卷,并为粪便标本提供了微生物群分析。通过针对细菌16S rRNA分子的高灵敏度逆转录-定量PCR分析法分析粪便菌群。粪便有机酸通过HPLC测量。总体而言,肠道菌群主要为Clostridium coccoides组,Leptum Leptum亚组,脆弱拟杆菌Bacteroides组,双歧杆菌和Atopobium簇(97.1±8.6%)。有趣的是,调整酸奶消费量的数据后,发现女性的总细菌总数(P = 0.013)和双歧杆菌(P = 0.046)和粪便pH(P = 0.007)较高,而粪便中总有机酸浓度较低(P = 0.030),琥珀酸(P = 0.007)和甲酸(P = 0.046)。总的来说,在男性和女性受试者中,酸奶的摄入量与乳酸杆菌和加氏乳杆菌亚组呈正线性相关。然而,在这种酸奶-菌群的关联中也发现了一些性别差异。男性的酸奶摄入量与酒类乳酸菌亚组,肠杆菌科和葡萄球菌呈负相关,而女性受试者与干酪乳杆菌亚组和琥珀酸呈正相关。该研究表明健康同质队列中酸奶消费与肠道菌群之间的关联,并表明该关联如何因寄主性别而不同。这些发现将有助于进行前瞻性研究,研究饮食与微生物组在人类健康和疾病中的相互作用。

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