Alterations in gut microbiota composition, plasma lipids, and brain activity, suggest inter-connected pathways influencing malnutrition-associated cognitive and neurodevelopmental changes.

Author:

O'Sullivan Justin1ORCID,Portlock Theo2,Sharma Talat3,Kakon Shahria3,Hartjen Berit4,Pook Chris2ORCID,Wilson Brooke2,Bhuttor Ayisha4,Ho Daniel2,Don Inoli2,Engelstad Anne-Michelle4,Lorenzo Renata Di4,Greaves Garrett4,Rahman Navin5ORCID,Kelsey Caroline4,Gluckman Peter6ORCID,Forrester Terrence7,Nelson Charles8

Affiliation:

1. Liggins Institute, The University of Auckland

2. The Liggins Institute, The University of Auckaland

3. Infectious Diseases Division, International Centre for Diarrheal Disease Research

4. Department of Pediatrics, Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School; Harvard Graduate School of Education

5. Department of Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School; Harvard Graduate School of Education

6. University of Auckland

7. Faculty of Medical Sciences, UWI Solutions for Developing Countries, The University of the West Indies (UWI)

8. Harvard Medical School

Abstract

Abstract Malnutrition affects over 30 million children annually and has profound immediate and enduring repercussions, with nearly half of child deaths under five linked to malnutrition. Survivors face lasting consequences, including impaired neurocognitive development, leading to cognitive and behavioural deficits, impacting academic performance and socioeconomic outcomes. Despite extensive literature on malnutrition’s associations with infections, metabolism, microbiome, and genomics, knowledge gaps persist around how these changes are mechanistically connected. The objective of this study was to identify gut microbiome mediated associations between Moderate Acute Malnutrition (MAM) and cognitive development. Despite limitations, this study provides evidence supporting the hypothesis that inter-connected pathways between the gut microbiome, microbial metabolism mediate plasma lipids, brain activity, and cognitive functions. Causality between gut microbiome, plasma metabolite changes, and MAM phenotype remains unclear, necessitating further research. However, these findings offer insights to optimize interventions for MAM-associated neurodevelopmental changes.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference68 articles.

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