Nutrients (Oct 2021)

Does Physical Inactivity Induce Significant Changes in Human Gut Microbiota? New Answers Using the Dry Immersion Hypoactivity Model

  • Maxence Jollet,
  • Kevin Nay,
  • Angèle Chopard,
  • Marie-Pierre Bareille,
  • Arnaud Beck,
  • Vincent Ollendorff,
  • Barbara Vernus,
  • Anne Bonnieu,
  • Mahendra Mariadassou,
  • Olivier Rué,
  • Frédéric Derbré,
  • Bénédicte Goustard,
  • Christelle Koechlin-Ramonatxo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13113865
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
p. 3865

Abstract

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Gut microbiota, a major contributor to human health, is influenced by physical activity and diet, and displays a functional cross-talk with skeletal muscle. Conversely, few data are available on the impact of hypoactivity, although sedentary lifestyles are widespread and associated with negative health and socio-economic impacts. The study aim was to determine the effect of Dry Immersion (DI), a severe hypoactivity model, on the human gut microbiota composition. Stool samples were collected from 14 healthy men before and after 5 days of DI to determine the gut microbiota taxonomic profiles by 16S metagenomic sequencing in strictly controlled dietary conditions. The α and β diversities indices were unchanged. However, the operational taxonomic units associated with the Clostridiales order and the Lachnospiraceae family, belonging to the Firmicutes phylum, were significantly increased after DI. Propionate, a short-chain fatty acid metabolized by skeletal muscle, was significantly reduced in post-DI stool samples. The finding that intestine bacteria are sensitive to hypoactivity raises questions about their impact and role in chronic sedentary lifestyles.

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