Olendzki Barbara, Bucci Vanni, Cawley Caitlin, Maserati Rene, McManus Margaret, Olednzki Effie, Madziar Camilla, Chiang David, Ward Doyle V, Pellish Randall, Foley Christine, Bhattarai Shakti, McCormick Beth A, Maldonado-Contreras Ana
Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Microbiology and Physiological Systems and Program of Microbiome Dynamics. University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA.
Gut Microbes. 2022 Jan-Dec;14(1):2046244. doi: 10.1080/19490976.2022.2046244.
Diet is a modifiable, noninvasive, inexpensive behavior that is crucial in shaping the intestinal microbiome. A microbiome "imbalance" or dysbiosis in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is linked to inflammation. Here, we aim to define the impact of specific foods on bacterial species commonly depleted in patients with IBD to better inform dietary treatment. We performed a single-arm, pre-post intervention trial. After a baseline period, a dietary intervention with the IBD-Anti-Inflammatory Diet (IBD-AID) was initiated. We collected stool and blood samples and assessed dietary intake throughout the study. We applied advanced computational approaches to define and model complex interactions between the foods reported and the microbiome. A dense dataset comprising 553 dietary records and 340 stool samples was obtained from 22 participants. Consumption of prebiotics, probiotics, and beneficial foods correlated with increased abundance of and , commonly depleted in IBD cohorts. We further show that specific foods categorized as prebiotics or adverse foods are correlated to levels of cytokines in serum (i.e., GM-CSF, IL-6, IL-8, TNF-alpha) that play a central role in IBD pathogenesis. By using robust predictive analytics, this study represents the first steps to detangle diet-microbiome and diet-immune interactions to inform personalized nutrition for patients suffering from dysbiosis-related IBD.
饮食是一种可改变、非侵入性且成本低廉的行为,对塑造肠道微生物群至关重要。炎症性肠病(IBD)中的微生物群“失衡”或失调与炎症有关。在此,我们旨在确定特定食物对IBD患者中通常减少的细菌种类的影响,以便更好地指导饮食治疗。我们进行了一项单臂干预前后试验。在基线期之后,开始采用IBD抗炎饮食(IBD-AID)进行饮食干预。在整个研究过程中,我们收集了粪便和血液样本,并评估了饮食摄入量。我们应用先进的计算方法来定义和模拟所报告食物与微生物群之间的复杂相互作用。从22名参与者那里获得了一个包含553条饮食记录和340份粪便样本的密集数据集。益生元、益生菌和有益食物的摄入与IBD队列中通常减少的[具体细菌种类未明确]和[具体细菌种类未明确]丰度增加相关。我们进一步表明,归类为益生元或不良食物的特定食物与血清中在IBD发病机制中起核心作用的细胞因子(即GM-CSF、IL-6、IL-8、TNF-α)水平相关。通过使用强大的预测分析,本研究迈出了第一步,以理清饮食-微生物群和饮食-免疫相互作用,为患有与失调相关IBD的患者提供个性化营养指导。