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Feb. 23, 2023
Study finds link between fungal microbes in infant gut and body weight
Obesity has been called a non-infectious pandemic. Fifteen per cent and 22 per cent of Canadian and American children and adolescents are classified as obese, respectively. Obesity is associated with , and childhood obesity increases the risk of obesity later in life.
Many studies have shown that bacteria in the intestinal microbiome 鈥斅爐he community of microbes in the human gut 鈥斅爌lay an important role in metabolism. Research has found strong associations between infant gut microbiome composition, infant growth trajectories, and the risk of becoming overweight or obese. However, little is known about the role that gut fungi, known as the mycobiome, play in early childhood health and development.
New discovery indicates gut fungi affect metabolism
Now, a led by researchers in the (CSM) at the 六九色堂 has found a link between the diversity, or number, of fungal species in the infant gut and the body-mass index (BMI) of infants.
鈥淭he pattern of fungal diversity was being reflected in the metabolism, or the body weight, of these children,鈥 says Dr. Marie-Claire Arrieta, PhD, associate professor in at the Cumming School of Medicine and principal investigator on the study. Along with changes in fungal diversity, the study found other contributing factors related to infant BMI. These included the BMI of the mother and her diet, exposure to antibiotics, and bacterial diversity in the infant gut.
鈥淭his is the first study that we know of to show specific types of gut fungi play a role in weight gain and growth in early childhood,鈥 says study co-first author Emily Mercer, a PhD candidate in 础谤谤颈别迟补鈥檚 research group in the (ACHRI) and the at CSM.
鈥淥ur findings suggest gut fungi may have important influences on early childhood development, highlighting the need for more research focused on the role of gut fungi in human health during the first years of life,鈥 Mercer says.
Arrieta says the observational study, which involved a small cohort of 100 infants, wasn鈥檛 designed to 鈥斅燼nd did not 鈥斅爏how a cause-and-effect relationship between infant gut fungal diversity and a child鈥檚 risk of becoming overweight or obese.
鈥淭his study sheds new light on some of the factors in the infant microbiome that influence a child鈥檚 metabolic health,鈥 Arrieta explains. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important that we don鈥檛 look at this huge ecosystem of microbes as a bacteria-only ecosystem.鈥澛
鈥淚t is still too early for the study鈥檚 findings to be translated into health-care recommendations,鈥 says study co-first author Mackenzie Gutierrez, a PhD candidate in 础谤谤颈别迟补鈥檚 research group.
鈥淚t will be important for our findings to be explored in other infant cohort studies in other locations around the world, to determine if these findings were specific to our cohort or if they are consistent in other populations as well,鈥 Gutierrez says.
The study, 鈥,鈥 is published in the journal Cell Reports Medicine.
New study made possible by massive CHILD Cohort Study
础谤谤颈别迟补鈥檚 research focuses on the role of intestinal microbiota in paediatric health and disease. She is the co-author of Let Them Eat Dirt, a book for parents that explores how the microbiome influences childhood development and health.
Arrieta says the new study wouldn鈥檛 have been possible without a massive database collected by the , one of the largest multidisciplinary, longitudinal, population-based birth cohort studies in Canada. Started in 2008, the CHILD (Canadian Healthy Infant Longitudinal Development) study tracks factors critical to the health and development of more than 3,400 Canadian children. Researchers are actively following the study participants over time as they grow and develop 鈥斅爁rom mid-pregnancy into childhood and adolescence.
础谤谤颈别迟补鈥檚 used a series of infant samples from the CHILD study to look at how the microbiome develops and matures in the first five years of life. Mercer, a microbial ecologist, suggested the team compare each child to themself, rather than only compare groups as is typically done in clinical studies.
Gutierrez employed the statistical tools to compare changes in the fungal species in the infant gut to BMI and other factors, and tease out how all the factors were related.
鈥淭his large community of trillions of microbes truly has an influence on our development, but it鈥檚 complex,鈥 Arrieta says. Her research group is now working on rodent-based experimental models of obesity, to explore the causal link between changing patterns of fungal diversity in the gut and early-life body weight.
Arrieta, a microbiologist by training and also a mother, was pregnant when she began her research, so she was personally interested in exploring the microbiome鈥檚 impact in early childhood.
鈥淭he message, building from all this new science about the microbiome, is that there鈥檚 a period that happens only early in life, during which the microbiome has a tremendous influence on the way our body develops,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e definitely need to pay attention to what happens to the microbiome early in life.鈥
The study was supported by the , the , and the at CSM.
Marie-Claire Arrieta is an assistant professor in the , and at the Cumming School of Medicine (CSM) and a member of the Snyder Institute and ACHRI at the CSM. She is also a聽 researcher in the and in the , a research and educational group in the Snyder Institute.
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