Department of Pediatrics, Kangnam Sacred Heart Hospital, Hallym University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea.
BMC Microbiol. 2021 Jan 6;21(1):10. doi: 10.1186/s12866-020-02002-3.
The association between the gut microbiota and pediatric obesity was analyzed in a cross-sectional study. A prospective study of obese children was conducted to assess the gut microbial alterations after a weight change. We collected fecal samples from obese children before and after a 2-month weight reduction program that consisted of individual counseling for nutritional education and physical activity, and we performed 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing using an Illumina MiSeq platform.
Thirty-six participants, aged 7 to 18 years, were classified into the fat loss (n = 17) and the fat gain (n = 19) groups according to the change in total body fat (%) after the intervention. The baseline analysis of the gut microbiota in the preintervention stages showed dysbiotic features of both groups compared with those of normal-weight children. In the fat loss group, significantly decreased proportions of Bacteroidetes phylum, Bacteroidia class, Bacteroidales order, Bacteroidaceae family, and Bacteroides genus, along with increased proportions of Firmicutes phylum, Clostridia class, and Clostridiales order, were observed after intervention. The microbial richness was significantly reduced, without a change in beta diversity in the fat loss group. The fat gain group showed significantly deceased proportions of Firmicutes phylum, Clostridia class, Clostridiales order, Lachnospiraceae family, and Eubacterium hallii group genus, without a change in diversity after the intervention. According to the functional metabolic analysis by the Phylogenetic Investigation of Communities by Reconstruction of Unobserved States 2, the "Nitrate Reduction VI" and "Aspartate Superpathway" pathways were predicted to increase significantly in the fat loss group. The cooccurring networks of genera were constructed and showed the different microbes that drove the changes between the pre- and postintervention stages in the fat loss and fat gain groups.
This study demonstrated that lifestyle modifications can impact the composition, richness, and predicted functional profiles of the gut microbiota in obese children after weight changes.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03812497 , registration date January 23, 2019, retrospectively registered.
本研究通过横断面研究分析了肠道微生物群与儿科肥胖的关系。对肥胖儿童进行了前瞻性研究,以评估体重变化后的肠道微生物变化。我们收集了肥胖儿童在为期 2 个月的减肥计划(包括营养教育和体育活动的个人咨询)前后的粪便样本,并使用 Illumina MiSeq 平台进行了 16S rRNA 基因扩增子测序。
36 名 7 至 18 岁的参与者根据干预后体脂肪(%)的变化分为脂肪减少(n=17)和脂肪增加(n=19)组。干预前阶段肠道微生物群的基线分析显示,两组与正常体重儿童相比均存在微生物失调特征。在脂肪减少组中,干预后观察到厚壁菌门、拟杆菌纲、拟杆菌目、拟杆菌科和拟杆菌属的比例显著降低,而厚壁菌门、梭菌纲和梭状芽胞杆菌目比例显著增加。微生物丰富度显著降低,脂肪减少组的β多样性无变化。脂肪增加组观察到厚壁菌门、梭菌纲、梭状芽胞杆菌目、lachnospiraceae 科和 Eubacterium hallii 组属的比例显著降低,干预后多样性无变化。根据通过重建未观察状态的群落系统发育分析的功能代谢分析,预测脂肪减少组中的“硝酸盐还原 VI”和“天冬氨酸超级途径”途径显著增加。构建了共发生网络属,并显示了脂肪减少和脂肪增加组在干预前后阶段变化的不同微生物。
本研究表明,生活方式的改变可以影响肥胖儿童体重变化后肠道微生物群的组成、丰富度和预测功能谱。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03812497,注册日期为 2019 年 1 月 23 日,为回顾性注册。