El-Kholy Omar, Nichols Lindsey, Elsayed Ahmed Adham R, Basson Marc D
Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria University, Alexandria, Alexandria, Egypt.
College of Medicine, Northeast Ohio Medical University, Rootstown, Ohio, USA.
Microbiologyopen. 2025 Aug;14(4):e70045. doi: 10.1002/mbo3.70045.
The gut microbiome critically influences digestion, mucosal permeability, metabolism, blood pressure, and lipid profile. Pathological shifts in these processes cause metabolic syndrome, a growing human health concern that may be modeled in animals with carbohydrate-loading diets. We reviewed the effects of carbohydrate-loading diets on the animal gut microbiome. A systematic literature search was performed up to September 2024 on five databases: Cochrane Library, PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, and VHL. Relevant animal studies were assessed for risk of bias using SYRCLE's tool. Seventeen studies were included, with data from more than 690 rodents. Carbohydrate-loading diets alter the gut microbiome composition, diversity, and ratios. High-carbohydrate, high-fat diets were almost consistently associated with an increased Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes (F/B) ratio. Different types of carbohydrates, such as fructose, sucrose, or even special diet types, vary widely in impacting both the microbiota and microbiota-associated pathophysiology, inducing different metabolic states and affecting blood pressure, gut structural integrity, immunomodulation, and other functions. Interventions added with or after feeding substantially modulated these diet-induced changes. Carbohydrate-loading diets can differentially influence the gut microbiome and associated physiology. High-fat carbohydrate diets, apart from starch-based diets, typically increase the F/B ratio, a shift linked to human obesity. In contrast, low-fat carbohydrate diets do not elevate the F/B ratio but instead produce diverse microbiome effects, ranging from beneficial to harmful, depending on the carbohydrate type and other influencing factors. Further animal and human research is crucial to validate and further illuminate the dietary impact on the gut microbiome.
肠道微生物群对消化、黏膜通透性、新陈代谢、血压和血脂状况有着至关重要的影响。这些过程中的病理变化会导致代谢综合征,这是一个日益引起人类健康关注的问题,可在食用高碳水化合物饮食的动物中进行模拟。我们综述了高碳水化合物饮食对动物肠道微生物群的影响。截至2024年9月,我们在五个数据库(考克兰图书馆、PubMed、Scopus、科学网和VHL)上进行了系统的文献检索。使用SYRCLE工具对相关动物研究进行偏倚风险评估。纳入了17项研究,涉及690多只啮齿动物的数据。高碳水化合物饮食会改变肠道微生物群的组成、多样性和比例。高碳水化合物、高脂肪饮食几乎始终与厚壁菌门与拟杆菌门(F/B)的比例增加有关。不同类型的碳水化合物,如果糖、蔗糖,甚至特殊饮食类型,在影响微生物群和与微生物群相关的病理生理学方面差异很大,会诱导不同的代谢状态,并影响血压、肠道结构完整性、免疫调节和其他功能。在喂食时或喂食后添加的干预措施会显著调节这些饮食诱导的变化。高碳水化合物饮食会对肠道微生物群和相关生理学产生不同的影响。除了以淀粉为基础的饮食外,高脂肪碳水化合物饮食通常会增加F/B比例,这种变化与人类肥胖有关。相比之下,低脂肪碳水化合物饮食不会提高F/B比例,而是会根据碳水化合物类型和其他影响因素产生从有益到有害的多种微生物群效应。进一步的动物和人体研究对于验证并进一步阐明饮食对肠道微生物群的影响至关重要。