4.8 Article

Linking Long-Term Dietary Patterns with Gut Microbial Enterotypes

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SCIENCE
卷 334, 期 6052, 页码 105-108

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AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1208344

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资金

  1. NIH [UH2 DK083981, RO1 AI39368]
  2. Penn Genome Frontiers Institute
  3. Penn Digestive Disease Center [P30 DK050306]
  4. Joint Penn-CHOP Center for Digestive, Liver, and Pancreatic Medicine [S10RR024525, UL1RR024134, K24-DK078228]
  5. Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Diet strongly affects human health, partly by modulating gut microbiome composition. We used diet inventories and 16S rDNA sequencing to characterize fecal samples from 98 individuals. Fecal communities clustered into enterotypes distinguished primarily by levels of Bacteroides and Prevotella. Enterotypes were strongly associated with long-term diets, particularly protein and animal fat (Bacteroides) versus carbohydrates (Prevotella). A controlled-feeding study of 10 subjects showed that microbiome composition changed detectably within 24 hours of initiating a high-fat/low-fiber or low-fat/high-fiber diet, but that enterotype identity remained stable during the 10-day study. Thus, alternative enterotype states are associated with long-term diet.

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