AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the effects of aerobic exercise and dietary interventions on gut microbiota in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and prediabetes, highlighting that these interventions can positively impact gut bacteria diversity and stability.
  • - Participants in the trial included different groups: those engaging in aerobic exercise, diet, a combination of both, and a control group, allowing researchers to analyze variations in gut microbiota composition.
  • - Findings indicate that individuals respond differently to the interventions based on their gut microbiome baseline, suggesting that personalized treatment plans for NAFLD could be developed, though further research with larger samples is necessary for confirmation.

Article Abstract

Exercise and diet are treatments for nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and prediabetes, however, how exercise and diet interventions impact gut microbiota in patients is incompletely understood. We previously reported a 8.6-month, four-arm (Aerobic exercise, n = 29; Diet, n = 28; Aerobic exercise + Diet, n = 29; No intervention, n = 29) randomized, singe blinded (for researchers), and controlled intervention in patients with NAFLD and prediabetes to assess the effect of interventions on the primary outcomes of liver fat content and glucose metabolism. Here we report the third primary outcome of the trial-gut microbiota composition-in participants who completed the trial (22 in Aerobic exercise, 22 in Diet, 23 in Aerobic exercise + Diet, 18 in No Intervention). We show that combined aerobic exercise and diet intervention are associated with diversified and stabilized keystone taxa, while exercise and diet interventions alone increase network connectivity and robustness between taxa. No adverse effects were observed with the interventions. In addition, in exploratory ad-hoc analyses we find that not all subjects responded to the intervention in a similar manner, when using differentially altered gut microbe amplicon sequence variants abundance to classify the responders and low/non-responders. A personalized gut microbial network at baseline could predict the individual responses in liver fat to exercise intervention. Our findings suggest an avenue for developing personalized intervention strategies for treatment of NAFLD based on host-gut microbiome ecosystem interactions, however, future studies with large sample size are needed to validate these discoveries. The Trial Registration Number is ISRCTN 42622771.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9091228PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-29968-0DOI Listing

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