Nurturing our microbes: stewardship of the life teeming within us can pay health dividends.Each of us is a metropolis. Bustling about in everyone's body are tens of trillions of microbes. Some are descended from starter populations provided by mom during birth. Additional bacteria, yeasts, and other life forms hitchhike hitch·hike v. hitch·hiked, hitch·hik·ing, hitch·hikes v.intr. To travel by soliciting free rides along a road. v.tr. To solicit or get (a free ride) along a road. in with foods. By age 3, everyone's gut hosts a fairly stable, yet diverse, ecosystem. Most of the tiny stowaways Stowaways are a Portuguese band from Matosinhos, who formed in 2001. They are made up of Nuno Sousa (vocals and guitar); Pedro Gonçalves (guitar); João Carujo, (drums)and Sérgio Seabra (bass). Fred on keyboards and João Covita on the accordion are more recent additions. hide out in the gastrointestinal tract--the gut--stealing a share of everything we eat or drink. But that's only fair, because most of these bugs give as good as they take, explains microbiologist Jeffrey I. Gordon. They not only help us digest food, he says, but they also harvest nutrients, manufacture certain vitamins, kill germs, neutralize bacterial toxins, and modulate the immune system immune system Cells, cell products, organs, and structures of the body involved in the detection and destruction of foreign invaders, such as bacteria, viruses, and cancer cells. Immunity is based on the system's ability to launch a defense against such invaders. . Sickness, antibiotic therapy, or stress, however, can disrupt the ecological balance among gut dwellers--known as flora--diminishing their benefits. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Because these benefits are vital to health--and to averting disease--drug manufacturers are eyeing gut microbes as potential therapeutic targets. In the future, "pharmaceutical companies might be drugging your bugs, not drugging you," suggests Jeremy Nicholson of Imperial College, London. In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified" meantime, meanwhile , over-the-counter therapies exist to bug, not drug, the bugs. Known as probiotics Probiotics Bacteria that are beneficial to a person's health, either through protecting the body against pathogenic bacteria or assisting in recovery from an illness. Mentioned in: Colonic Irrigation, Dysentery, Gastroenteritis , these yogurts and other foods or dietary supplements introduce or replenish beneficial gut species in the digestive system (SN: 2/2/02, p. 72). Probiotic pro·bi·ot·ic n. A dietary supplement containing live bacteria or yeast that supplements normal gastrointestinal flora, given especially after depletion of flora caused by infection or ingestion of an antibiotic drug. microbes' role in fighting generic diarrheal disease is old hat, but in the past decade, other influences on human immunity and metabolism have emerged. Certain microbial microbial pertaining to or emanating from a microbe. microbial digestion the breakdown of organic material, especially feedstuffs, by microbial organisms. supplements show the potential to reduce the severity of colds and other infections, temper body weight, and even help the elderly fight osteoporosis. The rub: Research is showing that a probiotic's benefits can be very specific. In fact, it might be more appropriate to view these microbes as a cornucopia cornucopia (kôr'ny kō`pēə), in Greek mythology, magnificent horn that filled itself with whatever meat or drink its owner requested. of diet-based, over-the-counter
micro-pharmacists--each able to dispense only a few therapies or
services.
But for all the promise that probiotics offer, they're no panacea, many researchers caution, and may even exhibit disturbing effects (see sidebar). Within a given species, some strains may confer health benefits, others may not. Yet when the right bug is ingested for a particular condition, even a small dose can trigger dramatic health benefits. DINING PARTNERS "The total number of microbes associated with our adult bodies exceeds the total number of our human cells by a factor of 10," says Gordon, of Washington University in St. Louis “Washington University” redirects here. For other uses, see Washington (disambiguation). Washington University in St. Louis is a private, coeducational, research university located in St. Louis, Missouri. . So effectively, "we're sort of a superorganism--one that's 90 percent microbial." Other animals have evolved a similar symbiosis symbiosis (sĭmbēō`sĭs), the habitual living together of organisms of different species. The term is usually restricted to a dependent relationship that is beneficial to both participants (also called mutualism) but may be extended to with--or even dependence on--gut microbes, the scientist notes. Rodents born by cesarean section cesarean section (sĭzâr`ēən), delivery of an infant by surgical removal from the uterus through an abdominal incision. The operation is of ancient origin: indeed, the name derives from the legend that Julius Caesar was born in this (so they get none of their moms' intestinal flora) and raised under germfree germ·free adj. Free of microorganisms. Adj. 1. germfree - free from germs or pathogenic organisms; sterile; "a germfree environment" conditions end up smaller than normal, his group found--despite eating "about 30 percent more food than their microbe-laden counterparts." Germfree animals not only appear less efficient at harvesting calories, he explains, but also "are prone to certain vitamin deficiencies" because gut microbes synthesize certain nutrients, such as vitamins [B.sub.12] and K. Gut flora also help the body mine minerals from the diet. "We have measured this for calcium,' says Jurgen Schrezenmeir of Germany's Federal Research Center for Nutrition and Food, in Kiel. His team showed that supplementing rats' diets with a probiotic strain of bacteria, Lactobacillus acidophilus Lactobacillus acidophilus A bacteria found in yogurt that changes the balance of the bacteria in the intestine in a beneficial way. Mentioned in: Strep Throat Lactobacillus acidophilus, n , kept the animals from losing bone, a symptom of early osteoporosis. This probiotic, renowned for its copious production of lactic acid lactic acid, CH3CHOHCO2H, a colorless liquid organic acid. It is miscible with water or ethanol. Lactic acid is a fermentation product of lactose (milk sugar); it is present in sour milk, koumiss, leban, yogurt, and cottage cheese. , occurs naturally in some yogurts and other fermented dairy products. Bonus intestinal acid should increase the solubility of several minerals, including calcium, Schrezenmeir explains. Extra lactic acid should also spur the growth of cells lining the gut, he says, creating a bigger cadre to sop up released minerals. To test these hypotheses, his group removed the ovaries Ovaries The female sex organs that make eggs and female hormones. Mentioned in: Choriocarcinoma ovaries (ō´v from 6-month-old female rats. The ensuing drop in the rodents' production of estrogen mimicked the hormonal environment of postmenopausal post·men·o·paus·al adj. Of or occurring in the time following menopause. postmenopausal Change of life Gynecology adjective Referring to the time in ♀ when menstrual periods stop for ≥ 1 yr women. Over the next 16 weeks, the rats began losing bone, modeling what happens in many elderly women. However, calcium uptake from the diet was somewhat higher--and bone loss somewhat reduced--in animals given L. acidophilus Acidophilus The bacteria called Lactobacillus acidophilus that is usually found in yogurt. Mentioned in: Balanitis, Blastomycosis, Coccidioidomycosis, Histoplasmosis, Sporotrichosis acidophilus, n . Calcium uptake and bone mass improved even more when the researchers simply supplemented the animals' diet with a material on which lactic acid bacteria The Lactic Acid Bacteria (LAB) comprise a clade of Gram positive, low-GC, acid tolerant, non-sporulating, non-respiring rod or cocci that are associated by their common metabolic and physiological characteristics. prefer to feed. That supplement--known as a prebiotic--contained carbohydrates that only bacteria can digest. Rodents receiving both prebiotics and probiotics retained the most bone and dietary calcium, the German team reported in the March 2007 Journal of Nutrition. Indeed, the combination restored bone mineral density bone mineral density n. See bone density. bone mineral density A measurement of bone mass, expressed as the amount of mineral–in grams divided by the area scanned in cm2. See Bone densitometry. and bone structure to about the level in rats with intact ovaries, Schrezenmeir says. TUNING IMMUNITY Probiotics are usually promoted as supporting intestinal health--a polite way of hinting that they may reduce the risk of diarrhea or bloating bloating Vox populi A lay term for post-prandial abdominal fullness or swelling . Far less appreciated is the broad range of immune conditions for which they show promise. The gut "is the body's largest immune organ," notes Arthur C. Ouwehand of the University of Turku For The university founded in 1640, see . History The Royal Academy of Turku
A study in 2005 by Schrezenmeir and his colleagues showed that daily treatment with a trio of probiotics didn't reduce the incidence of colds. But the supplementation did reduce the severity and duration of cold symptoms--including fever--compared with a group of people that didn't get probiotics. "We don't know the mechanism" for the probiotic advantage, Schrezenmeir says. However, in individuals given probiotics, the number of activated helper T cells--white blood cells that fight infection--increased, as did the number of germ-killing cells. Probiotics may move the immune system in the opposite direction as well. Over the past year, several research teams reported some success with probiotics in treating inflammatory bowel disease inflammatory bowel disease n. Abbr. IBD Any of several incurable and debilitating diseases of the gastrointestinal tract characterized by inflammation and obstruction of parts of the intestine. . At least one study found they could help control exaggerated inflammation in intensive care patients at high risk for multiple organ dysfunction syndrome--a hyperinflammatory condition. And in a paper last August, Ouwehand recounted how probiotics administered to pregnant women and babies reduced the likelihood that high-risk infants developed food allergies. In its newest work, Schrezenmeir's team incubated immune cells from the blood of healthy or allergic individuals together with several immune-stimulating substances. Cells from all of the people responded, but only cells from allergic people showed an exaggerated response to allergens. Adding four probiotic microbes or the naked DNA from probiotic bacteria to the mix substantially ratcheted down the response of immune cells, especially for people with allergies. About half of the immune-dampening effect in probiotic-treated cells was attributed to the live bugs, and half to their DNA--released when the beneficial bugs died. The work will appear in an upcoming Immunobiology. Probiotic benefits are typically attributed to the fact that supplemented microbes were alive. However, receptors on the surfaces of both immune cells and cells lining the gut can bind DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. , Schrezenmeir notes. Probiotic DNA won't be accessible to those cells until the microbe microbe /mi·crobe/ (mi´krob) a microorganism, especially a pathogenic one such as a bacterium, protozoan, or fungus.micro´bialmicro´bic mi·crobe n. dies. His team's new data suggest that probiotics--dead or alive--can affect systems in the body, perhaps by contributing to the communications among the gut's native microbes. WEIGHT MODULATORS A number of food companies are investigating new health applications for probiotic supplements and fortified fortified (fôrt adj containing additives more potent than the principal ingredient. foods. Among novel functions being explored at the Nestle research center in Lausanne, Switzerland, is probiotics' control over calorie use. Company scientists teamed up with researchers in England and Sweden for rodent experiments using strains of L. paracasei and L. rhamnosus, probiotics that Nestle discovered years ago. To create gut ecosystems in rats that model those of humans, the scientists seeded the guts of newborn mice--animals that were still germfree--with microbes from the digestive tracts of human babies. Beginning 6 weeks later, the researchers doctored the animals' drinking water for 14 days with one or the other of the probiotics. In the Jan. 15 Molecular Systems Biology Molecular Systems Biology is a scientific journal which covers systems biology at the molecular level with research in the fields of genomics, proteomics, metabolomics, bioinformatics, microbial systems, and the integration of cell signaling and regulatory networks. , Nestle biochemist Sunil Koehhar and his colleagues report that both strains of tested lactobacilli Lactobacilli, cariogenic, n a type of bacteria that may play an important role in tooth decay. It is usually found in small amounts in dental plaque. Its concentration increases with high sugar intake. increased the hosts' breakdown and use of simple carbohydrates. The data suggest that by helping people absorb more of the calories present in carbs, these or related probiotics might one day help fight malnutrition in parts of the world where carbohydrate-based diets are common, Kochhar says. But probiotics can push this metabolic pendulum the other way. Bile acids, produced mainly in the liver, play an important role in emulsifying dietary fats, a step that readies such lipids for digestion. The Nestle probiotics broke down taurocholic acid, an especially efficient emulsifying bile acid. The resulting cholic acid "is not a good fat emulsifier emulsifier /emul·si·fi·er/ (e-mul´si-fi?er) an agent used to produce an emulsion. e·mul·si·fi·er n. An agent used to make an emulsion of a fixed oil. ," notes Nicholson, a coauthor of the study--and after the probiotic treatment there was a 50-fold higher ratio of cholic to taurocholic acid in the treated animals' guts. This change diminished the rodents' uptake of dietary fat and also reduced their synthesis of potentially harmful fatty substances in the blood, such as low-density lipoprotein cholesterol low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (lōˈ-denˑ·s . Where obesity is a problem, the same bugs might help people limit weight gain by diminishing their absorption of fats. "You only need to take in 20 to 30 more calories a day than you expend to make you fat in 2 or 3 years," observes Nicholson. "What we're interested in is looking for [probiotic] microbes that might help you absorb 50 calories less a day." These metabolic findings complement observations by Gordon's team. The ecology of guts in lean and obese rodents is dominated by different bacteria, the Washington University researchers reported in 2006 in Nature (SN: 5/19/07, p. 314). The same holds for people. After collectively identifying all of the microbial genes present in the guts of the naturally lean and obese mice, "we found that genes involved in breaking down otherwise indigestible in·di·gest·i·ble adj. Difficult or impossible to digest: an indigestible meal. in complex carbohydrates were much better represented in the obese animals' gut communities," Gordon says. His group then transplanted gut flora from a lean or obese mouse into a germfree animal and fed all treated rodents the same amounts. Animals that had received the gut microbes from obese animals gained more fat than did the animals given flora from a lean mouse. Such experiments "show that differences in gut ecology influence the efficiency with which the bugs extract energy from foods," Gordon says. However, his team's data also show that gut microbes can alter what share of consumed energy will be stored as body fat. Identifying the specific microbes responsible for these effects could point to new classes of weight-controlling probiotics, Gordon suspects. SPECIAL EFFECTS For all of their potential weight-modulating similarities, the two Nestle probiotics had additional--and very different--actions. While the L. rhamnosus treatment dramatically decreased gut populations of potentially lethal bacteria known as Clostridium difficile (SN: 2/18/06, p. 104), the L. paracasei probiotic offered no defense against these germs. There may be some direct effect of the probiotic microbes on these germs, or even on food metabolism, Nicholson says. But his new data suggest that many of the probiotics' effects might best be characterized as microbial diplomacy--where small delegations of ingested germs persuade an army of resident microbes to adopt activities that better benefit their host. "Bacteria talk to each other all of the time," he says. Although there may be billions of local organisms, most "tend to behave like multicellular organisms," he explains. These mega-beings coordinate their activity via microbial chatter. They signal their intent through the production and secretion of specific molecules. "What we think is happening," Nicholson says, "is that the probiotic bugs enter the gut, producing their chemical signals." Relative to the hordes of microbes living in the gut, the incoming microbes make up only a teensy minority. However, based on the chemical dispatches issued during their transit through the intestines, the gut's longtime residents "start to change what they're doing." In the new study, Nicholson's group showed that the messages relayed by each of the Nestle probiotics seem to hit different families of resident flora, leading to different metabolic effects. One implication, he says, is that depending on which microbes permanently inhabit any particular individual's gut, the probiotic's message may resonate loudly or fall on deaf ears. So which probiotic is most likely to work for an individual may depend on the precise nature of his or her flora, Nicholson maintains. The challenge, he says, will be to find out which flora are present and in what numbers. In a paper due out soon in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. , his group will report the ability to get a rough inventory of those flora by analyzing their metabolic detritus detritus /de·tri·tus/ (de-tri´tus) particulate matter produced by or remaining after the wearing away or disintegration of a substance or tissue. de·tri·tus n. pl. in human urine. Because of "the significant involvement of the gut microbiota Microbiota (human) Microbial flora harbored by normal, healthy individuals. A number of microorganisms have become adapted to a particular site or ecologic niche in or on their host. in human health and disease," gut flora might make good targets for medicines, Nicholson and his colleagues argue in the February Nature Reviews: Drug Discovery. Consider that there are only about 3,000 human genes available to target with drug therapy--but "probably 100,000 gene targets in your gut microbiome," Nicholson says. To succeed, drug companies will need a better picture of the human gut's microbial genome. It so happens that the National Institutes of Health recently established the Human Microbiome Project to nail that down. RELATED ARTICLE: Not without Risks Probiotics exhibit a dark side. By design, probiotics should be helpful at best, benign at worst, notes Jeremy Nicholson of Imperial College, London. Side effects can occur, however, so unless people are battling an illness, he warns against consuming such microbes indiscriminately. "If it ain't broke," he argues, "don't fix it." The downside of probiotic therapy usually amounts to unexpected diarrhea. However, infections in the liver, heart, and other organs have also been linked to probiotics, according to a 2006 review by Robert J. Boyle of Royal Children's Hospital The Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne, Australia is the major specialist paediatric hospital for Victoria offering a full range of clinical services, tertiary care and health promotion and prevention programs for children and adolescents. in Victoria, Australia and his colleagues. Although the infectious agent in some cases was identical to the probiotic used, Boyle's group notes that an indicted INDICTED, practice. When a man is accused by a bill of indictment preferred by a grand jury, he is said to be indicted. strain of microbe may sometimes also "be found in the internal microbiota of healthy humans, so the source of infection in these cases is not conclusively [due to probiotics]." Last year, researchers reported in the September Pediatric pediatric /pe·di·at·ric/ (pe?de-at´rik) pertaining to the health of children. pe·di·at·ric adj. Of or relating to pediatrics. Intensive Care Medicine that they had shut down a pediatric trial with Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (LGG LGG Liege, Belgium - Bierset (Airport Code) LGG Living Greyhawk Gazetteer (roleplaying games, Dungeons & Dragons) LGG Light Gas Gun LGG Little Green Guys ), a widely used probiotic, owing to growing concern that it might actually spawn infections. Looking to cut the risk of hospital-acquired infections in severely ill children, Travis C.B. Honeycutt of WakeMed Health and Hospitals in Raleigh, N.C., and his team began randomly assigning kids to receive a probiotic or a placebo capsule daily while they were hospitalized in an intensive care unit. However, when three reports of LGG blood-borne infections in children emerged in quick succession from neighboring physicians outside the trial, the North Carolina researchers decided to perform an interim analysis to check whether LGG was as benign as they had told their patients' parents it was. "That analysis showed no benefit in our patients," Honeycutt recalls, "and a trend--although it was not statistically significant--towards increasing infections in our probiotics group." But the really big wake-up call came last month, when Dutch researchers published findings of a trial using probiotics in people with acute pancreatitis. Patients provided nutrition laced with six probiotics experienced a death rate nearly triple that of people fed just the nutrients (SN: 2/23/08, p. 115). |
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