Copenhagen (Denmark): A part of the Danish population may possess a unique combination of gut microorganisms that, on average, absorbs more energy from food than do their fellow Danes ' germs, according to recent research. The study takes us one step closer to understanding why some people, despite eating the same amount of food, acquire weight more quickly than others.
Unfair as it, some of us seem to put on weight just by looking at a plate of Christmas cookies, while others can munch away with abandon and not gain a gram. Part of the explanation could be related to the composition of our gut microbes. This, according to new research conducted at the University of Copenhagen's Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports.
Researchers studied the residual energy in the faeces of 85 Danes to estimate how effective their gut microbes are at extracting energy from food. At the same time, they mapped the composition of gut microbes for each participant. The results show that roughly 40 per cent of the participants belong to a group that, on average, extracts more energy from food compared to the other 60 per cent. The researchers also observed that those who extracted the most energy from food also weighed 10 per cent more on average, amounting to an extra nine kilograms.
"We may have found a key to understanding why some people gain more weight than others, even when they don't eat more or any differently. But this needs to be investigated further," says Associate Professor Henrik Roager of the University of Copenhagen's Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports.
May increase the risk of obesity:The results indicate that being overweight might not just be related to how healthily one eats or the amount of exercise one gets. It may also have something to do with the composition of a person's gut microbes. Participants were divided into three groups, based on the composition of their gut microbes. The so-called B-type composition (dominated by Bacteroides bacteria) is more effective at extracting nutrients from food and was observed in 40 per cent of the participants.
Following the study, the researchers suspect that a portion of the population may be disadvantaged by having gut bacteria that are a bit too effective at extracting energy. This effectiveness may result in more calories being available for the human host from the same amount of food.