Cardiometabolic benefits of a non-industrialized-type diet are linked to gut microbiome modulation
Cardiometabolic benefits of a non-industrialized-type diet are linked to gut microbiome modulationIs it possible to restore the human gut microbiome in industrialized settings and reintroduce microbial species that have been lost? In healthy adults, Li et al. found that consuming a diet mimicking non-industrialized dietary patterns (restore diet) together with a bacterium rarely found in industrialized human gut microbiomes (Limosilactobacillus reuteri) enhanced persistence of the latter. The diet also redressed several microbiome features altered by industrialization, which was linked to considerable cardiometabolic benefits.Is it possible to restore the human gut microbiome in industrialized settings and reintroduce microbial species that have been lost? In healthy adults, Li et al. found that consuming a diet mimicking non-industrialized dietary patterns (restore diet) together with a bacterium rarely found in industrialized human gut microbiomes (Limosilactobacillus reuteri) enhanced persistence of the latter. The diet also redressed several microbiome features altered by industrialization, which was linked to considerable cardiometabolic benefits.Fuyong Li, Anissa M. Armet, Katri Korpela, Junhong Liu, Rodrigo Margain Quevedo, Francesco Asnicar, Benjamin Seethaler, Tianna B.S. Rusnak, Janis L. Cole, Zhihong Zhang, Shuang Zhao, Xiaohang Wang, Adele Gagnon, Edward C. Deehan, João F. Mota, Jeffrey A. Bakal, Russell Greiner, Dan Knights, Nicola Segata, Stephan C. Bischoff, Laurie Mereu, Andrea M. Haqq, Catherine J. Field, Liang Li, Carla M. Prado, Jens Walterhttps://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(24)01477-6?rss=yeshttp://www.cell.com/cell/inpress.rssCellCell RSS feed.Wireless News CampaignJanuary 24, 2025
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