Butler Ross N, Kosek Margaret, Krebs Nancy F, Loechl Cornelia U, Loy Alexander, Owino Victor O, Zimmermann Michael B, Morrison Douglas J
*School of Pharmacy and Medical Sciences, Division of Health Sciences, University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia †Bloomberg School of Public Health, John Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD ‡Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, University of Colorado, Aurora §Nutrition and Health-Related Environmental Studies Section, Division of Human Health, International Atomic Energy Agency ||Division of Microbial Ecology, Department of Microbial and Ecosystem Science, Research Network Chemistry meets Microbiology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria ¶Institute of Food, Nutrition and Health, Department of Health Sciences and Technology, ETH Zürich, Zurich, Switzerland #Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre, University of Glasgow, East Kilbride, Scotland, UK.
J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr. 2017 Jan;64(1):8-14. doi: 10.1097/MPG.0000000000001373.
The International Atomic Energy Agency convened a technical meeting on environmental enteric dysfunction (EED) in Vienna (October 28-30, 2015; https://nucleus.iaea.org/HHW/Nutrition/EED_Technical_Meeting/index.html) to bring together international experts in the fields of EED, nutrition, and stable isotope technologies. Advances in stable isotope-labeling techniques open up new possibilities to improve our understanding of gastrointestinal dysfunction and the role of the microbiota in host health. In the context of EED, little is known about the role gut dysfunction may play in macro- and micronutrient bioavailability and requirements and what the consequences may be for nutritional status and linear growth. Stable isotope labeling techniques have been used to assess intestinal mucosal injury and barrier function, carbohydrate digestion and fermentation, protein-derived amino acid bioavailability and requirements, micronutrient bioavailability and to track microbe-microbe and microbe-host interactions at the single cell level. The noninvasive nature of stable isotope technologies potentially allow for low-hazard, field-deployable tests of gut dysfunction that are applicable across all age groups. The purpose of this review is to assess the state-of-the-art use of stable isotope technologies and to provide a perspective on where these technologies can be exploited to further our understanding of gut dysfunction in EED.
国际原子能机构于2015年10月28日至30日在维也纳召开了一次关于环境肠道功能障碍(EED)的技术会议(网址:https://nucleus.iaea.org/HHW/Nutrition/EED_Technical_Meeting/index.html),汇聚了EED、营养和稳定同位素技术领域的国际专家。稳定同位素标记技术的进展为增进我们对胃肠功能障碍以及微生物群在宿主健康中的作用的理解开辟了新的可能性。在EED的背景下,关于肠道功能障碍在常量和微量营养素生物利用度及需求方面可能发挥的作用以及对营养状况和线性生长可能产生的后果,我们所知甚少。稳定同位素标记技术已被用于评估肠黏膜损伤和屏障功能、碳水化合物消化与发酵、蛋白质衍生氨基酸的生物利用度和需求、微量营养素生物利用度,以及在单细胞水平追踪微生物-微生物和微生物-宿主相互作用。稳定同位素技术的非侵入性本质可能允许进行低风险、可在现场部署的肠道功能障碍检测,适用于所有年龄组。本综述的目的是评估稳定同位素技术的最新应用情况,并就如何利用这些技术进一步增进我们对EED中肠道功能障碍的理解提供一个视角。