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Mediterranean-Like Dietary Pattern Associations With Gut Microbiome Composition and Subclinical Gastrointestinal Inflammation

Authors :
Williams Turpin
Mei Dong
Gila Sasson
Juan Antonio Raygoza Garay
Osvaldo Espin-Garcia
Sun-Ho Lee
Anna Neustaeter
Michelle I. Smith
Haim Leibovitzh
David S. Guttman
Ashleigh Goethel
Anne M. Griffiths
Hien Q. Huynh
Levinus A. Dieleman
Remo Panaccione
A. Hillary Steinhart
Mark S. Silverberg
Guy Aumais
Kevan Jacobson
David Mack
Sanjay K. Murthy
John K. Marshall
Charles N. Bernstein
Maria T. Abreu
Paul Moayyedi
Andrew D. Paterson
Wei Xu
Kenneth Croitoru
Maria Abreu
Paul Beck
Charles Bernstein
Leo Dieleman
Brian Feagan
Anne Griffiths
David Guttman
Gilaad Kaplan
Denis O. Krause
Karen Madsen
John Marshall
Mark Ropeleski
Ernest Seidman
Mark Silverberg
Scott Snapper
Andy Stadnyk
Hillary Steinhart
Michael Surette
Dan Turner
Thomas Walters
Bruce Vallance
Alain Bitton
Maria Cino
Jeff Critch
Lee Denson
Colette Deslandres
Wael El-Matary
Hans Herfarth
Peter Higgins
Hien Huynh
Jeff Hyams
Jerry McGrath
Anthony Otley
Remo Panancionne
Robert Baldassano
Charlotte Hedin
Seamus Hussey
Hien Hyams
David Keljo
David Kevans
Charlie Lees
Sanjay Murthy
Nimisha Parekh
Sophie Plamondon
Graham Radford-Smith
Joel Rosh
David Rubin
Michael Schultz
Corey Siegel
Source :
Gastroenterology. 163:685-698
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Case-control studies have shown that patients with Crohn's disease (CD) have a microbial composition different from healthy individuals. Although the causes of CD are unknown, epidemiologic studies suggest that diet is an important contributor to CD risk, potentially via modulation of bacterial composition and gut inflammation. We hypothesized that long-term dietary clusters (DCs) are associated with gut microbiome compositions and gut inflammation. Our objectives were to identify dietary patterns and assess whether they are associated with alterations in specific gut microbial compositions and subclinical levels of gut inflammation in a cohort of healthy first-degree relatives (FDRs) of patients with CD.As part of the Genetic, Environmental, Microbial (GEM) Project, we recruited a cohort of 2289 healthy FDRs of patients with CD. Individuals provided stool samples and answered a validated food frequency questionnaire reflecting their habitual diet during the year before sample collection. Unsupervised analysis identified 3 dietary and 3 microbial composition clusters.DC3, resembling the Mediterranean diet, was strongly associated with a defined microbial composition, with an increased abundance of fiber-degrading bacteria, such as Ruminococcus, as well as taxa such as Faecalibacterium. The DC3 diet was also significantly associated with lower levels of subclinical gut inflammation, defined by fecal calprotectin, compared with other dietary patterns. No significant associations were found between individual food items and fecal calprotectin, suggesting that long-term dietary patterns rather than individual food items contribute to subclinical gut inflammation. Additionally, mediation analysis demonstrated that DC3 had a direct effect on subclinical inflammation that was partially mediated by the microbiota.Overall, these results indicated that Mediterranean-like dietary patterns are associated with microbiome and lower intestinal inflammation. This study will help guide future dietary strategies that affect microbial composition and host gut inflammation to prevent diseases.

Details

ISSN :
00165085
Volume :
163
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gastroenterology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....676c231364e901ec14a81d6c0fdd6936