Microorganisms (Aug 2024)

Two-Year Study on the Intra-Individual Dynamics of Gut Microbiota and Short-Chain Fatty Acids Profiles in Healthy Adults

  • Anastasia Senina,
  • Maria Markelova,
  • Dilyara Khusnutdinova,
  • Maria Siniagina,
  • Olga Kupriyanova,
  • Gulnaz Synbulatova,
  • Airat Kayumov,
  • Eugenia Boulygina,
  • Tatiana Grigoryeva

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms12081712
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8
p. 1712

Abstract

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While the gut microbiome has been intensively investigated for more than twenty years already, its role in various disorders remains to be unraveled. At the same time, questions about what changes in the gut microbiota can be considered as normal or pathological and whether communities are able to recover after exposure to negative factors (diseases, medications, environmental factors) are still unclear. Here, we describe changes in the gut microbiota composition and the content of short-chain fatty acids in adult healthy volunteers (n = 15) over a 24 month-period. Intraindividual variability in gut microbial composition was 40%, whereas the short chain fatty acids profile remained relatively stable (2-year variability 20%, inter-individual 26%). The changes tend to accumulate over time. Nevertheless, both short-term and long-term changes in the gut microbiome composition were significantly smaller within individuals than interindividual differences (two-year interindividual variability was 75%). Seasonal changes in gut microbiota were found more often in autumn and spring involving the content of minor representatives (less than 1.5% of the community in average) in the phyla Actinobacteriota, Firmicutes and Proteobacteria.

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