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Interaction between obesity and the gut microbiota: relevance in nutrition
This review examines mechanisms by which the bacteria present in the gut interact with nutrients and host biology to affect the risk of obesity and associated disorders, including diabetes, inflammation, and liver diseases. The bacterial metabolism of nutrients in the gut is able to drive the releas...
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Published in: | Annual review of nutrition 2011-08, Vol.31 (1), p.15-31 |
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container_title | Annual review of nutrition |
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creator | Delzenne, Nathalie M Cani, Patrice D |
description | This review examines mechanisms by which the bacteria present in the gut interact with nutrients and host biology to affect the risk of obesity and associated disorders, including diabetes, inflammation, and liver diseases. The bacterial metabolism of nutrients in the gut is able to drive the release of bioactive compounds (including short-chain fatty acids or lipid metabolites), which interact with host cellular targets to control energy metabolism and immunity. Animal and human data demonstrate that phylogenic changes occur in the microbiota composition in obese versus lean individuals; they suggest that the count of specific bacteria is inversely related to fat mass development, diabetes, and/or the low levels of inflammation associated with obesity. The prebiotic and probiotic approaches are presented as interesting research tools to counteract the drop in target bacteria and thereby to estimate their relevance in the improvement of host metabolism. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1146/annurev-nutr-072610-145146 |
format | article |
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subjects | Animals Gastrointestinal Tract - microbiology Humans Nutritional Status Obesity - diet therapy Obesity - metabolism Obesity - microbiology Prebiotics Probiotics - metabolism Probiotics - therapeutic use Symbiosis |
title | Interaction between obesity and the gut microbiota: relevance in nutrition |
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