http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=ODUwNTIzMDEy

Could germs be making you fat?


Published Date: March 06, 2010 

WASHINGTON: Germs that make their home in the gut may help cause obesity and a 
range of health-threatening symptoms that go along with it, researchers 
reported yesterday. It could be that certain bacteria cause inflammation that 
can affect appetite as well as inflammatory bowel conditions like Crohn's 
disease and colitis, the researchers reported in the journal Science.

In other words, the germs make you overeat, Andrew Gewirtz of Emory University 
in Atlanta and colleagues reported. "Previous research has suggested that 
bacteria can influence how well energy is absorbed from food, but these 
findings demonstrate that intestinal bacteria can actually influence appetite," 
Gewirtz said. "The obesity epidemic is driven by people eating too much, but 
why are people eating more?

Gewirtz said the research suggests that bacteria may play a role-perhaps a 
population of bacteria that thrive because other, competing organisms have been 
wiped out by antibiotics, access to clean water and other factors of modern 
life. His team stumbled on the findings by accident. "We were studying mice 
that had colitis," Gewirtz said in a telephone interview. The team suspected 
some kind of germ was responsible, so they transferred mouse embryos into 
surrogate mothers to prevent them from being infected
by their own mothers.

Babies are colonized by bacteria and other micro-organisms soon after birth and 
the makeup of these colonies-which persist for life in the skin and bowels-are 
very similar to those of the mother. The colitis was better but the baby mice 
became obese and developed metabolic syndrome-a cluster of symptoms that 
include unhealthy cholesterol levels, too much fat around the midsection, high 
blood pressure and insulin resistance. Insulin resistance means the body does 
not use insulin effectively to break down fo
od and Gewirtz believes this may be the key.

PREVIOUS RESEARCH
The researchers remembered a recent study in which normal, slender mice became 
obese when fed gut bacteria from fat mice. They worked with that team, 
including Ruth Ley of Cornell University in New York, to see what role the gut 
bacteria may be playing. "What we think is that the mice are prone to 
intestinal inflammation," Gewirtz said. "If you have a lot of inflammatory 
signals about, insulin won't work properly.

Weeks of antibiotic therapy helped, and so did diets. "If we limit their food 
intake they are mostly OK; they certainly are no longer obese," he said. "They 
are, however, insulin-resistant." Gewirtz's team is now working to see if they 
can identify the micro-organisms involved. They are also working to see if 
obese people have unique patterns of gut bacteria.

Scientists know that hundreds of species of bacteria live in the gut and an 
average person carries about 5 pounds worth. On Wednesday, Chinese scientists 
reported in the journal Nature that they found 1,000 different species in human 
intestines. So could you treat obesity by taking an antibiotic to wipe out the 
offending germs that are making people overeat? "It is very hard to replace the 
bacteria that you have," Gewirtz said. Studies already show it is difficult to 
treat conditions like Crohn's disease,
even with months of antibiotics. - Reuters 

Kirim email ke