Disrupted gut microbiome networks and unhealthy behaviors predict metabolic dysfunction in children and adolescents in the long term
Silvia Turroni, Kathrin Günther, Federica D’Amico, Toomas Veidebaum, Yiannis Kourides, Dénes Molnár, Lauren Lissner, Ronja Foraita, Monica Barone, Carlos Mora-Martínez, Yolanda Sanz, Arno Fraterman, Maike Wolters, Patrizia Brigidi, Marco Candela, Wolfgang Ahrens, Simone Rampelli

TL;DR
Disrupted gut microbiome networks and unhealthy habits in children and adolescents may lead to long-term metabolic issues like obesity.
Contribution
The study links gut microbiome network structure and unhealthy behaviors to future metabolic dysfunction in youth.
Findings
Unbalanced gut microbiome profiles with low diversity and activity are linked to obesity risk.
Healthy eating and physical activity can protect against metabolic dysfunction.
A diverse and connected gut microbiome may promote long-term metabolic health.
Abstract
We recently showed that the individual gut microbiome (GM) configuration in children and adolescents, together with long-term dietary habits, can predict the development of obesity. Here, we expanded our previous cohort to include 218 individuals and used 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing, shotgun metatranscriptomics, and a network approach to analyze fecal samples collected at a baseline survey and after a 4-year follow-up, investigating associations with health status, dietary intake, and other health-related behaviors. Our results showed that an unbalanced GM profile in children/adolescents, with few represented species, poor connectivity, and low transcriptional activity (especially in relation to molecular effectors that positively influence gut and immune health), combined with unhealthy behaviors (i.e., low-fiber diet and reduced physical activity), may favor the onset of obesity.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGut microbiota and health · Nutrition, Genetics, and Disease · Immune responses and vaccinations
