Association between Gut Microbiota and Muscle Strength in Japanese General Population of the Iwaki Health Promotion Project

Author:

Sugimura Yoshikuni1,Yang Yichi1,Kanda Akira2,Mawatari Akihiro1,Tamada Yoshinori3ORCID,Mikami Tatsuya4ORCID,Nakaji Shigeyuki14ORCID,Ihara Kazushige1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Social Medicine, Graduate School of Medicine, Hirosaki University, 5 Zaifu-cho, Hirosaki 036-8562, Aomori, Japan

2. Department of Nutrition, Faculty of Health Sciences, Graduate School of Health Sciences, Aomori University of Health and Welfare, 58-1 Mase, Hamadate 030-8505, Aomori, Japan

3. Department of Medical Data Intelligence, Hirosaki University, 5 Zaifu-cho, Hirosaki 036-8562, Aomori, Japan

4. Department of Preemptive Medicine, Innovation Center for Health Promotion, Graduate School of Medicine, Hirosaki University, 5 Zaifu-cho, Hirosaki 036-8562, Aomori, Japan

Abstract

The association between the gut microbiota and muscle strength has garnered attention in the context of mitigating muscle decline. However, many study subjects have been individuals with existing illnesses or the elderly only. This study aims to elucidate the association between the gut microbiota and muscle strength indicators using grip strength/BMI in a large-scale study of community residents. The mean age of men (n = 442) and women (n = 588) was 50.5 (15.3) and 51.2 (15.9) years, respectively. The muscle strength indicator used was grip/BMI. The association between total read count and genus-level gut microbiota and muscle strength was analyzed. The mean grip/BMI was 1.8 (0.3) for men and 1.2 (0.2) for women. The genus of the gut microbiota that showed an association in both sexes was Eggerthella (men: β = 0.18, CI: 0.04–0.31, p = 0.009; women: β = 0.07, CI: 0.00–0.12, p = 0.028). Blautia, Eggerthella and Faecalibacterium were found to be significantly associated with grip/BMI in both the multiple regression analysis and Spearman’s correlation analysis after the multiple comparison adjustment. These results suggest that an increase in Blautia and Eggerthella, coupled with a decrease in Faecalibacterium, may contribute to muscle strengthening or the suppression of muscle weakness.

Funder

JST COI

Publisher

MDPI AG

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