Posted on 04/11/2018 1:59:51 PM PDT by Red Badger
The small intestine, where most vitamins and other micronutrients are digested and absorbed. Credit: Wikimedia Commons
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Although the vast majority of research on the gut microbiome has focused on bacteria in the large intestine, a new studyone of a few to concentrate on microbes in the upper gastrointestinal tractshows how the typical calorie-dense western diet can induce expansion of microbes that promote the digestion and absorption of high-fat foods.
Several studies have shown that these bacteria can multiply within 24 to 48 hours in the small bowel in response to consumption of high-fat foods. The findings from this work suggest that these microbes facilitate production and secretion of digestive enzymes into the small bowel.
Those digestive enzymes break down dietary fat, enabling the rapid absorption of calorie-dense foods. Concurrently, the microbes release bioactive compounds. These compounds stimulate the absorptive cells in the intestine to package and transport fat for absorption. Over time, the steady presence of these microbes can lead to over-nutrition and obesity.
"These bacteria are part of an orchestrated series of events that make lipid absorption more efficient," said the study's senior author, Eugene B. Chang, MD, the Martin Boyer Professor of Medicine and director of the NIH Digestive Diseases Research Core Center at the University of Chicago Medicine. "Few people have focused on the microbiome of the small intestine, but this is where most vitamins and other micronutrients are digested and absorbed."
"Our study is one of the first to show that specific small-bowel microbes directly regulate both digestion and absorption of lipids," he added. "This could have significant clinical applications, especially for the prevention and treatment of obesity and cardiovascular disease."
The goals of the study, published April 11, 2018 in the journal Cell Host and Microbe, were to find out if microbes were required for digestion and absorption of fats, to begin to learn which microbes were involved, and to assess the role of diet-induced microbes on the digestion and uptake of fats.
The study involved mice that were germ-free, bred in isolated chambers and harboring no intestinal bacteria, and mice that were "specific pathogen free (SPF)," meaning healthy but harboring common non-disease causing microbes.
The germ-free mice, even when fed a high-fat diet, were unable to digest or absorb fatty foods. They did not gain weight. Instead, they had elevated lipid levels in their stool.
SPF mice that received a high-fat diet did gain weight. This diet quickly boosted the abundance of certain microbes in the small intestine, including microbes from the Clostridiaceae and Peptostreptococcaceae families. A member of Clostridiaceae was found to specifically impact fat absorption. The abundance of other bacterial families decreased on a high-fat diet including Bifidobacteriacaea and Bacteriodacaea, which are commonly associated with leanness.
When germ-free mice were subsequently introduced to microbes that contribute to fat digestion, they quickly gained the ability to absorb lipids.
"Our study found that, at least in mice, a high-fat diet can profoundly alter the microbial make-up of the small intestine," Chang said. "Certain dietary pressures, such as calorie-dense foods, attract specific bacterial strains into the small intestine. These microbes are then able to allow the host to digest this high-fat diet and absorb fats. That can even impact extra-intestinal organs such as the pancreas."
"This work has important implications in developing approaches to combat obesity," the authors conclude. This includes decreasing the abundance or activity of certain microbes that promote fat absorption, or increasing the abundance of microbes that may inhibit fat uptake.
"I would say the most important takeaway overall is the concept that what we eatour diet on a daily basishas a profound impact on the abundance and the type of bacteria we harbor in our gut," said Kristina Martinez-Guryn, PhD, lead author of the study, and now an assistant professor at Midwestern University in Downers Grove, IL. "These microbes directly influence our metabolism and our propensity to gain weight on certain diets."
Although this study was very preliminary, she added, "our results suggest that maybe we could use pre- or probiotics or even develop post-biotics (bacterial-derived compounds or metabolites) to enhance nutrient uptake for people with malabsorption disorders, such as Crohn's disease, or we could test novel ways to decrease obesity."
Explore further: Manipulating the microbiome could help manage weight
More information: "Small intestine microbiota regulate host digestive and absorptive adaptive responses to dietary lipids," Cell Host and Microbe (2018). DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2018.03.011
Journal reference: Cell Host and Microbe Provided by: University of Chicago Medical Cente
Fattys take note(if it aint to late)
running faster than your fork could help....news at 11...
huge news, which is that, pun no pun ?
It’s Hugh and Series!....................
What this article doesn’t tell you is that regardless of how well lipids are digested, it is not (primarily) fats that are stored as fats. It is carbohydrates that are metabolized into fat at the cellular level signaled by the presence of insulin. It seems very ironic and counter intuitive to most people, but fats do not make you fat. Carbohydrates do.
Make your OWN kombucha:
1. Order a SCOBY (Symbiotic Colony of Bacteria and Yeast) from Ebay (~$7). It looks like a hockey puck. Yeah, it’s alive (arrives in a sealed plastic sleeve with yummy juice to feed the SCOBY in mail transit). U only have to buy it ONE time, it will grow each time u make kombucha.
2. Brew up a bunch of concentrated BLACK tea (which appears normally tea colored).
3. Make it super sweet with common sugar
4. Let the tea cool, put it in a clean glass container with a very wide mouth
5. Put the SCOBY in the tea
6. Cover that container with a clean dish-cloth or cheesecloth
7. Put it in a dark, room-temp place for 2 or 3 weeks. Try not to bother it.
8. Taste a little with a clean spoon or ladel. Is that the taste you want..? If you let it ferment longer, it will be fizzier and less sweet.
Lots of instructions on YouTube for the secondary ferment (when u can add fruit puree, or whatever...I like blueberry and ginger).
It tastes a lot like soda but it’s super GOOD for you.
Yes, plus carbs make cholesterol, not fats................
Eat plenty of plain yogurt and kefir, not the sweetened stuff.
Rosie ODonnel must be hogging them
Bookmark
Funny that you never saw people with a thyroid problem in concentration camps..
Could it be as simple as... eating less? naaa.... couldn’t be!
/s
“What this article doesnt tell you is that regardless of how well lipids are digested, it is not (primarily) fats that are stored as fats. It is carbohydrates that are metabolized into fat at the cellular level signaled by the presence of insulin. It seems very ironic and counter intuitive to most people, but fats do not make you fat. Carbohydrates do.”
actually, article does indeed imply (falsely) that fat makes you fat:
“These microbes directly influence our metabolism and our propensity to gain weight on certain diets.”
pretty much ALL popular/fake stream media continue to propagate the falsified theory that eating saturated fat will kill you via “clogging up your arteries” and/or making you fat.
Sounds gross. Whats it supposed to do for you?
Doesn’t change the fact that you don’t gain what you don’t eat. If you don’t cut you will plus.
.
Mostly nonsense, probably to win a grant.
Most important are Pancreatic enzymes, and Iodine.
Fats, especially saturated fats, are vital to protecting and feeding the brain.
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How many thyroid tests have you performed on concentration camp victims?
I get a kombucha called “LIVE” and it comes in Cola, Dr. Pepper, Root Beer, and Ginger flavors. My grocery store carries it but Whole Foods also sells it. Very tasty and only 35 calories per bottle.
Later
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