4.5 Article

Gut microbiota, dietary intakes and intestinal permeability reflected by serum zonulin in women

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Volume 57, Issue 8, Pages 2985-2997

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00394-018-1784-0

Keywords

Gut microbiota; Zonulin; Intestinal permeability; Diversity; Ruminococcaceae; Faecalibacterium; Dietary intakes

Funding

  1. Medical University of Graz
  2. Austrian Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy (BMWFW), Hochschulraum-Strukturmittel 2016-Grant as part of Integrated Data Management Project
  3. Energy sensing in anorexia nervosa (ESAN) project [IC3490]

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Purpose Increased gut permeability causes the trespass of antigens into the blood stream which leads to inflammation. Gut permeability reflected by serum zonulin and diversity of the gut microbiome were investigated in this cross-sectional study involving female study participants with different activity and BMI levels. Methods 102 women were included (BMI range 13.24-46.89 kg m(-2)): Anorexia nervosa patients (n = 17), athletes (n = 20), normal weight (n = 25), overweight (n = 21) and obese women (n = 19). DNA was extracted from stool samples and subjected to 16S rRNA gene analysis (V1-V2). Quantitative Insights Into Microbial Ecology (QIIME) was used to analyze data. Zonulin was measured with ELISA. Nutrient intake was assessed by repeated 24-h dietary recalls. We used the median of serum zonulin concentration to divide our participants into a high-zonulin (> 53.64 ng/ml) and low-zonulin (< 53.64 ng/ml) group. Results The alpha-diversity (Shannon Index, Simpson Index, equitability) and beta-diversity (unweighted and weighted UniFrac distances) of the gut microbiome were not significantly different between the groups. Zonulin concentrations correlated significantly with total calorie-, protein-, carbohydrate-, sodium- and vitamin B12 intake. Linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe) identified Ruminococcaceae (LDA = 4.163, p = 0.003) and Faecalibacterium (LDA = 4.151, p = 0.0002) as significantly more abundant in the low zonulin group. Conclusion Butyrate-producing gut bacteria such as Faecalibacteria could decrease gut permeability and lower inflammation. The diversity of the gut microbiota in women does not seem to be correlated with the serum zonulin concentration. Further interventional studies are needed to investigate gut mucosal permeability and the gut microbiome in the context of dietary factors.

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