Date: February 4, 2016
Source: Cell Press
Each year, as bears prepare to
hibernate, they gorge themselves on food to pack on fat. And yet, despite the
rapid weight gain, the animals somehow avoid the health consequences so often
associated with obesity in humans. Now, researchers reporting in Cell
Reports on February 4 show that the bears' shifting metabolic status is
associated with significant changes in their gut microbes.
Fredrik Bäckhed of the University
of Gothenburg in Sweden, who led the new study, said he was particularly struck
by the discovery that the bears' summer gut microbiota includes microbes that
take in more energy from the diet.
"The restructuring of the
microbiota into a more avid energy harvester during summer, which potentially
contributes to the increased adiposity gain without impairing glucose
metabolism, is quite striking," he said.
Bäckhed and his colleagues showed
more than 10 years ago that the composition of the gut microbiota can influence
the amount of energy harvested from the diet. Much more recently, they found
that the microbiota also shifts in people who are obese and in those with type
2 diabetes. That led them to wonder whether changes to the microbiota might
also be important in hibernating brown bears in the wild.
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