Blue poo: impact of gut transit time on the gut microbiome using a novel marker

Author:

Asnicar Francesco,Leeming Emily RORCID,Dimidi Eirini,Mazidi Mohsen,Franks Paul W,Al Khatib Haya,Valdes Ana M,Davies RichardORCID,Bakker Elco,Francis Lucy,Chan Andrew,Gibson Rachel,Hadjigeorgiou George,Wolf Jonathan,Spector Timothy D,Segata Nicola,Berry Sarah E

Abstract

Background and aimsGut transit time is a key modulator of host–microbiome interactions, yet this is often overlooked, partly because reliable methods are typically expensive or burdensome. The aim of this single-arm, single-blinded intervention study is to assess (1) the relationship between gut transit time and the human gut microbiome, and (2) the utility of the ‘blue dye’ method as an inexpensive and scalable technique to measure transit time.MethodsWe assessed interactions between the taxonomic and functional potential profiles of the gut microbiome (profiled via shotgun metagenomic sequencing), gut transit time (measured via the blue dye method), cardiometabolic health and diet in 863 healthy individuals from the PREDICT 1 study.ResultsWe found that gut microbiome taxonomic composition can accurately discriminate between gut transit time classes (0.82 area under the receiver operating characteristic curve) and longer gut transit time is linked with specific microbial species such as Akkermansia muciniphila, Bacteroides spp and Alistipes spp (false discovery rate-adjusted p values <0.01). The blue dye measure of gut transit time had the strongest association with the gut microbiome over typical transit time proxies such as stool consistency and frequency.ConclusionsGut transit time, measured via the blue dye method, is a more informative marker of gut microbiome function than traditional measures of stool consistency and frequency. The blue dye method can be applied in large-scale epidemiological studies to advance diet-microbiome-health research. Clinical trial registry website https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03479866 and trial number NCT03479866.

Funder

National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health

MIUR ‘Futuro in Ricerca’

European H2020

Zoe Global

Premio Internazionale Lombardia e Ricerca

H2020 European Research Council

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Gastroenterology

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