Cardiometabolic benefits of a non-industrialized-type diet are linked to gut microbiome modulation
University of Alberta · University of Helsinki · +10 more institutions
Abstract
Industrialization adversely affects the gut microbiome and predisposes individuals to chronic non-communicable diseases. We tested a microbiome restoration strategy comprising a diet that recapitulated key characteristics of non-industrialized dietary patterns (restore diet) and a bacterium rarely found in industrialized microbiomes (Limosilactobacillus reuteri) in a randomized controlled feeding trial in healthy Canadian adults. The restore diet, despite reducing gut microbiome diversity, enhanced the persistence of L. reuteri strain from rural Papua New Guinea (PB-W1) and redressed several microbiome features altered by industrialization. The diet also beneficially altered microbiota-derived plasma…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 46.96
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 151
Authors
26Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Gut microbiome
- Microbiome
- Genetics
- Zero hunger