Industrialized diets modulate host eating behavior via the microbiome-gut-brain axis.

Yi Jia Liow,Amar Sarkar,Rachel N Carmody
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Abstract

The gut microbiome is an important participant in the gut-brain axis and a key mediator of host-diet interactions that shape feeding behavior. These effects occur through microbial metabolism of dietary components - fiber, sugar, fat, and protein - into bioactive metabolites that influence microbiome-gut-brain signaling. Industrialized diets are enriched in highly processed, energy-dense foods characterized by elevated fat and sugar content and reduced fiber content. These diets have been implicated in altered eating behaviors involving the microbiome-gut-brain axis. We propose that different ratios of dietary substrates in industrialized diets perturb the microbiome-gut-brain axis, thereby driving changes in microbial metabolite production and downstream signaling with behavioral consequences. Integration of microbiome and neuroscience methodologies will help to delineate the causal mechanisms by which diet shapes interoceptive signaling and eating behavior.
工业化饮食通过微生物群-肠-脑轴调节宿主的饮食行为。
肠道微生物群是肠-脑轴的重要参与者,也是塑造摄食行为的宿主-饮食相互作用的关键媒介。这些影响是通过微生物将膳食成分(纤维、糖、脂肪和蛋白质)代谢为影响微生物群-肠-脑信号的生物活性代谢物而发生的。工业化饮食富含高度加工、能量密集的食物,其特点是脂肪和糖含量升高,纤维含量降低。这些饮食与改变饮食行为有关,涉及微生物群-肠-脑轴。我们认为,工业化饮食中不同比例的膳食底物扰乱了微生物群-肠-脑轴,从而驱动了微生物代谢物产生和下游信号的变化,并产生了行为后果。微生物组和神经科学方法的整合将有助于描述饮食塑造内感受信号和饮食行为的因果机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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