Gut Bacteria: Now Assuming Control Of Your Brain
It sounds like science fiction, but a new paper in the journal BioEssays
says that bacteria within us — which outnumber our own cells about 100-fold — may very well be affecting both our cravings and moods to get us to eat what they want, and often are driving us toward obesity.
says that bacteria within us — which outnumber our own cells about 100-fold — may very well be affecting both our cravings and moods to get us to eat what they want, and often are driving us toward obesity.
The scholars from UC San Francisco, Arizona State University and
University of New Mexico concluded that from a review of the recent
scientific literature that microbes influence human eating behavior and
dietary choices to favor consumption of the particular nutrients they
grow best on, rather than simply passively living off whatever nutrients
we choose to send their way.
Bacterial species vary in the nutrients they need. Some prefer fat,
and others sugar, for instance. But they not only vie with each other
for food and to retain a niche within their ecosystem — our digestive
tracts — they also often have different aims than we do when it comes to
our own actions, according to senior author Athena Aktipis, PhD,
co-founder of the Center for Evolution and Cancer with the Helen Diller
Family Comprehensive Cancer Center at UCSF.
While it is unclear exactly how this occurs, the authors believe this
diverse community of microbes, collectively known as the gut
microbiome, may influence our decisions by releasing signaling molecules
into our gut. Because the gut is linked to the immune system, the
endocrine system and the nervous system, those signals could influence
our physiologic and behavioral responses.
"Bacteria within the gut are manipulative," said Carlo Maley, PhD,
director of the UCSF Center for Evolution and Cancer and corresponding
author on the paper." "There is a diversity of interests represented in
the microbiome, some aligned with our own dietary goals, and others
not."
Fortunately, it's a two-way street. We can influence the
compatibility of these microscopic, single-celled houseguests by
deliberating altering what we ingest, Maley said, with measurable
changes in the microbiome within 24 hours of diet change.
"Our diets have a huge impact on microbial populations in the gut,"
Maley said. "It's a whole ecosystem, and it's evolving on the time scale
of minutes."
There are even specialized bacteria that digest seaweed, found in humans in Japan, where seaweed is popular in the diet.
Research suggests that gut bacteria may be affecting our eating
decisions in part by acting through the vagus nerve, which connects 100
million nerve cells from the digestive tract to the base of the brain.
"Microbes have the capacity to manipulate behavior and mood through
altering the neural signals in the vagus nerve, changing taste
receptors, producing toxins to make us feel bad, and releasing chemical
rewards to make us feel good," said Aktipis, who is currently in the
Arizona State University Department of Psychology.
In mice, certain strains of bacteria increase anxious behavior. In
humans, one clinical trial found that drinking a probiotic containing
Lactobacillus casei improved mood in those who were feeling the lowest.
Maley, Aktipis and first author Joe Alcock, MD, from the Department
of Emergency Medicine at the University of New Mexico, proposed further
research to test the sway microbes hold over us. For example, would
transplantation into the gut of the bacteria requiring a nutrient from
seaweed lead the human host to eat more seaweed?
The speed with which the microbiome can change may be encouraging to
those who seek to improve health by altering microbial populations. This
may be accomplished through food and supplement choices, by ingesting
specific bacterial species in the form of probiotics, or by killing
targeted species with antibiotics. Optimizing the balance of power among
bacterial species in our gut might allow us to lead less obese and
healthier lives, according to the authors.
"Because microbiota are easily manipulatable by prebiotics,
probiotics, antibiotics, fecal transplants, and dietary changes,
altering our microbiota offers a tractable approach to otherwise
intractable problems of obesity and unhealthy eating," the authors
wrote.
The authors met and first discussed the ideas in the BioEssays
paper at a summer school conference on evolutionary medicine two years
ago. Aktipis, who is an evolutionary biologist and a psychologist, was
drawn to the opportunity to investigate the complex interaction of the
different fitness interests of microbes and their hosts and how those
play out in our daily lives. Maley, a computer scientist and
evolutionary biologist, had established a career studying how tumor
cells arise from normal cells and evolve over time through natural
selection within the body as cancer progresses.
In fact, the evolution of tumors and of bacterial communities are
linked, points out Aktipis, who said some of the bacteria that normally
live within us cause stomach cancer and perhaps other cancers.
"Targeting the microbiome could open up possibilities for preventing a
variety of disease from obesity and diabetes to cancers of the
gastro-intestinal tract. We are only beginning to scratch the surface of
the importance of the microbiome for human health," she said.
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