Abstract

Dietary interventions to manipulate the human gut microbiome for improved health have received increasing attention. However, their design has been limited by a lack of understanding of the quantitative impact of diet on a host's microbiota. We present a highly controlled diet perturbation experiment in a healthy, human cohort in which individual micronutrients are spiked in against a standardized background. We identify strong and predictable responses of specific microbes across participants consuming prebiotic spike-ins, at the level of both strains and functional genes, suggesting fine-scale resource partitioning in the human gut. No predictable responses to non-prebiotic micronutrients were found. Surprisingly, we did not observe decreases in day-to-day variability of the microbiota compared to a complex, varying diet, and instead found evidence of diet-induced stress and an associated loss of biodiversity. Our data offer insights into the effect of a low complexity diet on the gut microbiome, and suggest that effective personalized dietary interventions will rely on functional, strain-level characterization of a patient's microbiota.

Details

Title
Predictability and persistence of prebiotic dietary supplementation in a healthy human cohort
Author
Gurry, Thomas; Hst Microbiome Consortium; Gibbons, Sean; Le Thanh Tu Nguyen; Kearney, Sean; Ananthakrishnan, Ashwin; Ziang, Xiaofang; Kassam, Zain; Alm, Eric
University/institution
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Section
New Results
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Nov 21, 2017
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
ISSN
2692-8205
Source type
Working Paper
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2071246015
Copyright
�� 2017. This article is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/ (���the License���). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.