Gut microbiota: new links between exercise and disease
Yini Wu, Yinfeng Wang, Qingtong Zhang, Lijuan Yao, Zhennan Ma, Leqin Chen

TL;DR
Exercise can help prevent diseases like obesity and diabetes by changing the gut microbiota, which affects immune function and inflammation.
Contribution
This paper reviews how exercise reshapes the gut microbiota and its role in disease prevention, highlighting gaps in understanding exercise-dose relationships.
Findings
Exercise modulates gut microbiota to suppress oxidative stress and reduce inflammation.
Short-chain fatty acids and bile acids from the gut microbiota show adaptive benefits in disease prevention.
Current evidence lacks detailed characterization of how different exercise intensities affect microbiota structure.
Abstract
As the “second genome” of the human body, the intestinal microbiota plays a key role in preventing the onset and progression of obesity, metabolic disorders, and inflammatory diseases by modulating immune function, maintaining metabolic homeostasis, and reinforcing mucosal barrier integrity. This review systematically investigates the biological and physiological mechanisms underlying the interaction between exercise and the gut microbiota in disease prevention. Existing evidence suggests that exercise, as a non-pharmacological intervention, can prevent and manage obesity, diabetes, and neurodegenerative diseases by reshaping the composition and function of the gut microbiota, suppressing oxidative stress, reducing inflammatory markers, and maintaining intestinal mucosal barrier homeostasis. Current evidence has begun to elucidate the molecular mechanisms by which the gut microbiota…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGut microbiota and health · Clostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research · Drug Transport and Resistance Mechanisms
