Mohr Alex E, Jasbi Paniz, van Woerden Irene, Bowes Devin A, Chi Jinhua, Gu Haiwei, Bruening Meg, Whisner Corrie M
College of Health Solutions, Arizona State University, Phoenix, AZ, USA.
Center for Health through Microbiomes, Biodesign Institute, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA.
Br J Nutr. 2025 Jun 28;133(12):1473-1486. doi: 10.1017/S0007114525103668. Epub 2025 Jun 17.
Food insecurity affects the health of college-aged individuals, but its impact on the gut microbiome (GM) over time is poorly understood. This study explored the association between food insecurity and the GM in eighty-five college students, identifying microbial taxa, metabolites and pathways linked to food security status and examining GM stability and microbe–metabolite interactions. Longitudinal GM and metabolomic data were collected from first-year students over an academic year, encompassing periods of variable food security status. Participants were categorised into three groups: food insecure (FI, 13), food secure (FS, 44) and variable (VAR, 28) status. GM composition varied significantly between FS classifications (Bray–Curtis dissimilarity, ≤ 0·005). Stability analysis revealed correlations between stability scores and microbial features, pathways and metabolites. Specific microbes (e.g. species, and ), pathways (energy and microbial turnover) and metabolites (cadaverine, N-acetylcadaverine, putrescine, testosterone sulfate and creatine) associated with FI status were identified. Multi-omic integration revealed metabolic pathways influenced by differentially abundant microbial species and co-occurring fecal metabolites in FI participants related to the microbial production of polyamines, detoxification and energy metabolism. The transition from FS to FI showed no significant differences at specific taxonomic, functional or metabolite levels. This study uncovers complex interactions between food security, GM composition and metabolism. Significant differences were found in microbial community variability and metabolic pathways associated with food security status, but the transition from food security to insecurity disrupted the GM without clear taxonomic or functional distinctions, emphasising the need for further research into these mechanisms.
粮食不安全影响着大学年龄段人群的健康,但随着时间推移其对肠道微生物群(GM)的影响却知之甚少。本研究探讨了85名大学生中粮食不安全与肠道微生物群之间的关联,确定了与粮食安全状况相关的微生物分类群、代谢物和途径,并研究了肠道微生物群的稳定性以及微生物与代谢物之间的相互作用。在一学年内从一年级学生中收集了纵向的肠道微生物群和代谢组学数据,涵盖了粮食安全状况不同的时期。参与者被分为三组:粮食不安全(FI,13人)、粮食安全(FS,44人)和状况多变(VAR,28人)。不同粮食安全分类之间的肠道微生物群组成存在显著差异(Bray-Curtis差异度,≤0.005)。稳定性分析揭示了稳定性评分与微生物特征、途径和代谢物之间的相关性。确定了与粮食不安全状况相关的特定微生物(如物种和)、途径(能量和微生物周转)和代谢物(尸胺、N-乙酰尸胺、腐胺、硫酸睾酮和肌酸)。多组学整合揭示了在粮食不安全参与者中,受差异丰富的微生物物种和同时出现的粪便代谢物影响的代谢途径,这些途径与多胺的微生物产生、解毒和能量代谢有关。从粮食安全到粮食不安全的转变在特定的分类学、功能或代谢物水平上没有显著差异。本研究揭示了粮食安全、肠道微生物群组成和代谢之间的复杂相互作用。在与粮食安全状况相关的微生物群落变异性和代谢途径中发现了显著差异,但从粮食安全到不安全的转变扰乱了肠道微生物群,却没有明确的分类学或功能区别,这强调了对这些机制进行进一步研究的必要性。