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Abstract
The gut microbiome is emerging as a key modulator of human energy balance. Prior studies in humans lacked the environmental and dietary controls and precision required to quantitatively evaluate the contributions of the gut microbiome. Using a Microbiome Enhancer Diet (MBD) designed to deliver more dietary substrates to the colon and therefore modulate the gut microbiome, we quantified microbial and host contributions to human energy balance in a controlled feeding study with a randomized crossover design in young, healthy, weight stable males and females (NCT02939703). In a metabolic ward where the environment was strictly controlled, we measured energy intake, energy expenditure, and energy output (fecal and urinary). The primary endpoint was the within-participant difference in host metabolizable energy between experimental conditions [Control, Western Diet (WD) vs. MBD]. The secondary endpoints were enteroendocrine hormones, hunger/satiety, and food intake. Here we show that, compared to the WD, the MBD leads to an additional 116 ± 56 kcals (P < 0.0001) lost in feces daily and thus, lower metabolizable energy for the host (89.5 ± 0.73%; range 84.2-96.1% on the MBD vs. 95.4 ± 0.21%; range 94.1-97.0% on the WD; P < 0.0001) without changes in energy expenditure, hunger/satiety or food intake (P > 0.05). Microbial 16S rRNA gene copy number (a surrogate of biomass) increases (P < 0.0001), beta-diversity changes (whole genome shotgun sequencing; P = 0.02), and fermentation products increase (P < 0.01) on an MBD as compared to a WD along with significant changes in the host enteroendocrine system (P < 0.0001). The substantial interindividual variability in metabolizable energy on the MBD is explained in part by fecal SCFAs and biomass. Our results reveal the complex host-diet-microbiome interplay that modulates energy balance.
The gut microbiome is causally linked to body weight in preclinical models. Here, in a controlled feeding study, the authors show that greater delivery of gut-microbiome fermentable dietary substrates to the colon leads to a net negative energy balance that is accompanied by robust microbial and host responses.
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1 AdventHealth Translational Research Institute, Orlando, USA (GRID:grid.489332.7)
2 Arizona State University, Biodesign Center for Health through Microbiomes, Tempe, USA (GRID:grid.215654.1) (ISNI:0000 0001 2151 2636); Arizona State University, Biodesign Swette Center for Environmental Biotechnology, Tempe, USA (GRID:grid.215654.1) (ISNI:0000 0001 2151 2636)
3 Arizona State University, Biodesign Center for Health through Microbiomes, Tempe, USA (GRID:grid.215654.1) (ISNI:0000 0001 2151 2636); Skyology Inc, San Francisco, USA (GRID:grid.215654.1)
4 Arizona State University, Biodesign Swette Center for Environmental Biotechnology, Tempe, USA (GRID:grid.215654.1) (ISNI:0000 0001 2151 2636); Arizona State University, School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment, Tempe, USA (GRID:grid.215654.1) (ISNI:0000 0001 2151 2636)
5 Arizona State University, Biodesign Center for Health through Microbiomes, Tempe, USA (GRID:grid.215654.1) (ISNI:0000 0001 2151 2636); Arizona State University, School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment, Tempe, USA (GRID:grid.215654.1) (ISNI:0000 0001 2151 2636)