Colonic transit time is related to bacterial metabolism and mucosal turnover in the gut

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Little is known about how colonic transit time relates to human colonic metabolism and its importance for host health, although a firm stool consistency, a proxy for a long colonic transit time, has recently been positively associated with gut microbial richness. Here, we show that colonic transit time in humans, assessed using radio-opaque markers, is associated with overall gut microbial composition, diversity and metabolism. We find that a long colonic transit time associates with high microbial richness and is accompanied by a shift in colonic metabolism from carbohydrate fermentation to protein catabolism as reflected by higher urinary levels of potentially deleterious protein-derived metabolites. Additionally, shorter colonic transit time correlates with metabolites possibly reflecting increased renewal of the colonic mucosa. Together, this suggests that a high gut microbial richness does not per se imply a healthy gut microbial ecosystem and points at colonic transit time as a highly important factor to consider in microbiome and metabolomics studies.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer16093
TidsskriftNature Microbiology
Vol/bind1
Udgave nummer9
Antal sider9
ISSN2058-5276
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2016

Bibliografisk note

CURIS 2016 NEXS 252

ID: 165661307