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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsImmigrants arrive with flourishing gut microbes. Then America's diet trashes them.
Immigrants arrive with flourishing gut microbes. Then Americas diet trashes them.
A graphic depicting the loss of microbe diversity after immigration to the United States. (Cell) (Britton, Carly (ELS-CMA))
By Ben Guarino November 2 at 1:14 PM
An empire of germs dwells inside you, trillions strong. About a half-pound of bacteria plus their genes make up our microbiome. Though each microbe is small, a healthy and diverse microbiome is mighty. Its influence, studies suggest, spans the human condition from mood swings to weight gain.
The microbiome begins as a departing gift from mothers at birth, but many factors alter its composition. Growing evidence shows location has a profound impact on the diversity of microbes, and some places are much less diverse than others. A study published this week in the journal Cell follows multi-generation immigrants from Southeast Asia to the United States. As they moved, their microbes responded. Once in the United States, the immigrants' gut diversity dropped to resemble the less-varied microbiomes in European Americans. At the same time, obesity rates spiked.
We found that moving to a new country changes your microbiome, said Dan Knights, a computational microbiologist at the University of Minnesota and an author of the paper. You pick up the microbiome of the new country and possibly some of the new disease risks that are more common in that country.
In the United States, immigrants in the study ate foods richer in sugars, fats and protein. Microbiomes changed within months of moving. People began to lose their native microbes almost immediately after arriving in the U.S.," Knights said. The loss of diversity was quite pronounced: Just coming to the USA, just living in the USA, was associated with a loss of about 15 percent of microbiome diversity.
...
A graphic depicting the loss of microbe diversity after immigration to the United States. (Cell) (Britton, Carly (ELS-CMA))
By Ben Guarino November 2 at 1:14 PM
An empire of germs dwells inside you, trillions strong. About a half-pound of bacteria plus their genes make up our microbiome. Though each microbe is small, a healthy and diverse microbiome is mighty. Its influence, studies suggest, spans the human condition from mood swings to weight gain.
The microbiome begins as a departing gift from mothers at birth, but many factors alter its composition. Growing evidence shows location has a profound impact on the diversity of microbes, and some places are much less diverse than others. A study published this week in the journal Cell follows multi-generation immigrants from Southeast Asia to the United States. As they moved, their microbes responded. Once in the United States, the immigrants' gut diversity dropped to resemble the less-varied microbiomes in European Americans. At the same time, obesity rates spiked.
We found that moving to a new country changes your microbiome, said Dan Knights, a computational microbiologist at the University of Minnesota and an author of the paper. You pick up the microbiome of the new country and possibly some of the new disease risks that are more common in that country.
In the United States, immigrants in the study ate foods richer in sugars, fats and protein. Microbiomes changed within months of moving. People began to lose their native microbes almost immediately after arriving in the U.S.," Knights said. The loss of diversity was quite pronounced: Just coming to the USA, just living in the USA, was associated with a loss of about 15 percent of microbiome diversity.
...
More at link.
Link to study:
https://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(18)31382-5
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Immigrants arrive with flourishing gut microbes. Then America's diet trashes them. (Original Post)
sl8
Nov 2018
OP
smirkymonkey
(63,221 posts)1. Interesting.
Just anecdotally, I have rarely met really heavy people who were born in other nations and moved to the US as young adults or older. In fact they mostly quite thin.
PatSeg
(47,587 posts)2. Same here
And I'm old enough to remember when most people were relatively thin in this country.