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Scientists link weight to gut
bacteria
By SETH BORENSTEIN
Washington
- Maybe it's germs that are making you fat. Researchers found a
strong connection between obesity and the levels of certain types of
bacteria in the gut. That could mean that someday there will be
novel new ways of treating obesity that go beyond the standard
advice of diet and exercise.
According to two studies being
published in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature, both obese mice
and people had more of one type of bacteria and less of another
kind.
A "microbial component" appears to
contribute to obesity, said study lead author Jeffrey Gordon,
director of Washington University's Center for Genome Sciences.
Obese humans and mice had a lower
percentage of a family of bacteria called Bacteroidetes and more of
a type of bacteria called Firmicutes, Gordon and his colleagues
found.
The researchers aren't sure if more
Firmicutes makes you fat or if people who are obese grow more of
that type of bacteria.
But growing evidence of this link
gives scientists a potentially new and still distant way of fighting
obesity: Change the bacteria in the intestines and stomach. It also
may lead to a way of fighting malnutrition in the developing world.
"We are getting more and more
evidence to show that obesity isn't what we thought it used to be,"
said Nikhil Dhurandhar, a professor of infection and obesity at
Louisiana State University's Pennington Biomedical Research Center.
"It isn't just (that) you're eating
too much and you're lazy."
Dhurandhar wasn't part of the
research, but said it may change the way obesity is treated
eventually.
He said the field of "infectobesity"
looks at obesity with multiple causes, including viruses and
microbes. In another decade or so, the different causes of obesity
could have different treatments. The current regimen of diet and
exercise "is like treating all fevers with one aspirin," Dhurandhar
said.
In one of the two studies in
Nature, Gordon and colleagues looked at what happened in mice with
changes in bacteria level. When lean mice with no germs in their
guts had larger ratios of Firmicutes transplanted, they got "twice
as fat" and took in more calories from the same amount of food than
mice with the more normal bacteria ratio, said Washington University
microbiology instructor Ruth Ley, a study co-author.
It was as if one group got far more
calories from the same bowl of Cheerios than the other, Gordon said.
In a study of dozen dieting people,
the results also were dramatic.
Before dieting, about 3 percent of
the gut bacteria in the obese participants was Bacteroidetes. But
after dieting, the now normal-sized people had much higher levels of
Bacteroidetes — close to 15 percent, Gordon said.
"I think that gut bacteria affects
body weight," said Virginia Commonwealth University pathology
professor Richard Atkinson, who wasn't part of the research team and
is president of Obetech Obesity Research Center in Richmond. "I
don't think there's any doubt about that and they showed that."
The growing field of research puts
more importance in the trillions of microbes that live in our guts
and elsewhere, crediting it with everything from generations of
people getting taller to increases in diabetes and asthma.
People are born germ-free, but
within days they have a gut blooming with microbes. The microbes
come from first foods — either breast milk or formula — the exterior
environment, and the way the babies are born, said Stanford
University medicine and microbiology professor David Relman, who was
not part of the study.
For decades, doctors have treated
bacteria in a "warlike" manner, yet recent research shows that "most
encounters we have with microbes are very beneficial," Gordon said.
"Much of who we are and what we can
do and can't do as human beings is directly related to microbial
inhabitants," Relman said. -- The
Associated Press
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