Gut microbial clusters in children show different cardiometabolic responses to wholegrains - a post hoc analysis of a randomized wholegrain trial in children
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2025

The beneficial effects of wholegrain intake on cardiometabolic risk may be mediated by the gut microbiota. In adults, cardiometabolic responses appear to be influenced partly by the structure of the gut microbiome ecosystem. However, this has not been investigated in children. We aimed to identify gut microbial clusters among children and explore their role in the cardiometabolic response to high wholegrain intake. The present study utilized data from a previous randomized cross-over study involving 51 Danish 8-13 year-old children with high BMI, provided with wholegrain oats and rye ("WG") and refined grain ("RG") for 8 weeks in random order. Anthropometry, body composition, cardiometabolic markers in blood, and blood and faecal short-chain fatty acids were assessed at 0, 8 and 16 weeks. Faecal microbiota composition was assessed by 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing and microbial clusters were identified by partitioning around medoid clustering. We used linear mixed models to investigate the modifying effects of the baseline microbial cluster on the cardiometabolic effects of wholegrain. We identified two clusters dominated by Faecalibacterium (Cluster 1, n = 25), and Clostridium (Cluster 2, n = 26), respectively. Cluster modified the effects of WG on BMI z-score, fat mass index, and waist circumference (all Pinteraction <= 0.002), which were reduced among children in Cluster 1 and increased in those in Cluster 2. Cluster also modified the effect on HDL cholesterol (Pinteraction = 0.03) and tended to modify the effect on faecal butyrate. In conclusion, two distinct gut microbial clusters were identified in schoolchildren, which appeared to affect how effectively a high wholegrain intake reduced fat mass.

Författare

Marie B. M. Madsen

Copenhagen University Hospital

Köpenhamns universitet

Lars H. Christensen

Köpenhamns universitet

Arla Foods

Dennis S. Nielsen

Köpenhamns universitet

Yichang Zhang

Köpenhamns universitet

Henrik M. Roager

Köpenhamns universitet

Lotte Lauritzen

Köpenhamns universitet

Rikard Landberg

Chalmers, Life sciences, Livsmedelsvetenskap

Camilla T. Damsgaard

Köpenhamns universitet

Food and Function

2042-6496 (ISSN) 2042-650X (eISSN)

Vol. 16 19 7607-7616

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)

Livsmedelsvetenskap

Näringslära och dietkunskap

DOI

10.1039/d5fo02026c

PubMed

40960896

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2025-10-11