Microbial Colonization Clinical Trial
Official title:
Rewilding the Human Gut: Reintroduction of the Species Limosilactobacillus Reuteri
| Verified date | May 2020 |
| Source | University of Alberta |
| Contact | n/a |
| Is FDA regulated | No |
| Health authority | |
| Study type | Interventional |
The large intestine is home to trillions of microbes, known as the gut microbiome, which perform essential functions, such as digesting food and fighting disease. The diversity of microbes present in our gut microbiome is influenced by lifestyle factors, such as dietary patterns, medication usage, and sanitation practices. Research shows that the diversity of the human gut microbiome decreases as societies undergo industrialization. For example, fecal samples from rural Papua New Guineans contain an additional 50 microbial species, such as Limosilactobacillus reuteri, not found in people living in the United States. What has caused the disappearance of L. reuteri in industrialized countries is currently unknown. However, diet is a major factor influencing the composition of the gut microbiome. Microbiota-accessible carbohydrates (MACs) are indigestible carbohydrates that are a primary source of energy for gut microbes. North Americans consume far less of these carbohydrates (which are contained in foods such as beans, yams, and artichokes) than rural Papua New Guineans. The overall aim of this controlled feeding study is to determine if a strain of L. reuteri isolated from rural Papua New Guinea can be established in the gut of Canadians when taken as a probiotic alongside a non-industrialized-type diet designed to promote its growth. Furthermore, the study will determine: (i) the physiological and immunological effects of both L. reuteri and the non-industrialized-type diet, and (ii) the effects of both L. reuteri and the non-industrialized-type diet on gut microbiome ecology.
| Status | Completed |
| Enrollment | 30 |
| Est. completion date | January 31, 2020 |
| Est. primary completion date | January 31, 2020 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
| Gender | All |
| Age group | 18 Years to 45 Years |
| Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Healthy individuals with a body mass index between 20-29.9 kg/m² - Have at least one bowel movement per day - Willing to consume prepared study foods (breakfast, lunch dinner, snacks) for a period of 3 weeks - Men and pre-menopausal, non-pregnant or non-lactating women - Non-vegetarian, non-smoking, and alcohol intake =8 drinks/week, and willing to consume 8 drinks per week or less during the course of the study. - If consuming probiotic containing foods, willing to discontinue eating same, and substitute with non-probiotic containing foods -=5 h/week of moderate-vigorous exercise. - Quantity of L. reuteri in screening fecal sample below 10^4 CFU/g Exclusion Criteria: - History of diabetes, acute or chronic GI illnesses, conditions, or history of GI surgical intervention - antibiotic treatment in the last 3 months - use of dietary supplements (including prebiotics and probiotics, fiber supplements/bars, digestive enzymes/beano)- if consumed, willing to undergo 4 week pre-intervention washout period, and remain free of supplements for duration of study. Exception: multivitamin or vitamin d supplement (1 week washout period) - use of antihypertensive, lipid-lowering, anti-diabetic, anti-inflammatory (i.e corticosteroids or chronic NSAID use), or laxative medications - known food allergies or intolerances (including dairy allergic or lactose intolerant) |
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | University of Alberta | Edmonton | Alberta |
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| University of Alberta |
Canada,
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| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Establishment of L. reuteri (PB-W1 & DSM20016T strains) in the gut of Canadian individuals | The primary outcome of this study is to measure L. reuteri (PB-W1 and DSM20016T strains) establishment in the gut of Canadian individuals. This will be measured by selective bacterial culture from fecal samples and quantified through quantitative PCR using species specific primers. | 21 days | |
| Primary | Enhanced persistence of colonization of L. reuteri (PB-W1 & DSM20016T strains) following consumption of non-industrialized-type diet designed to provide growth substrates for L. reuteri | We will measure if the persistence of L. reuteri in the gut of Canadian individuals is enhanced by the consumption of a non-industrialized-type diet specifically designed to provide growth substrates (MACs) for L. reuteri. This will be measured by selective bacterial culture from fecal samples and quantified through quantitative PCR using species specific primers. | 21 days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L. reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on cardiometabolic surrogate endpoints: fasting glucose and lipid panel. | Plasma from blood samples will be analyzed for changes in glucose, triglycerides, low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, non-HDL cholesterol, and total cholesterol (mmol/L). | 21 days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L. reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on cardiometabolic surrogate endpoints: fasting insulin levels. | Plasma from blood samples will be analyzed for changes in insulin (µIU/L). | 21 Days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L. reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on cardiometabolic surrogate endpoints: homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance and quantitative insulin sensitivity check index. | Homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance and quantitative insulin sensitivity check index will be calculated based on fasting glucose and insulin levels. | 21 Days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L. reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on cardiometabolic surrogate endpoints: fasting C-reactive protein levels. | Plasma from blood samples will be analyzed for changes in C-reactive protein (mg/L). | 21 Days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L. reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on cardiometabolic surrogate endpoints: body weight. | Body weight will be measured in kilograms. | 21 Days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L. reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on inflammatory bowel disease surrogate endpoint: fecal calprotectin levels. | Fecal samples will be analyzed for changes in calprotectin (ng/mg). | 21 Days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L. reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on biomarkers of gut barrier function: lipopolysaccharide binding protein. | Plasma from blood samples will be analyzed for changes in lipopolysaccharide binding protein (µg/mL). | 21 Days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L. reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on biomarkers of gut barrier function: fecal zonulin levels. | Fecal samples will be analyzed for changes in zonulin (ng/mg). | 21 days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on the composition of the fecal microbiome. | o Fecal samples will be analyzed using 16S rRNA-sequencing to measure changes in the fecal microbiome at the phylum, class, order, family, genus, and amplicon sequencing variant levels. Fecal microbiome composition will also be analyzed using whole metagenome sequencing to measure changes at the phylum, class, order, family, genus, species, and species-level genome bin levels. | 4-21 days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on the function of the fecal microbiome: enzyme levels. | Fecal samples will be analyzed using whole metagenome sequencing to measure changes in enzymes encoded by gut microbiota. | 8 days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on the function of the fecal microbiome: short-chain fatty acid levels. | Short-chain fatty acids (acetate, propionate, butyrate, valerate) and branched-chain fatty acids (isovalerate, isobutyrate) will be measured in fecal samples using gas chromatography mass spectrometry (µmol/g). | 8 & 21 days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on the function of the fecal microbiome: pH. | Fecal pH will be measured using a pH meter. | 8 & 21 days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L. reuteri strains and non-industrialized-type diet on the metabolome. | Plasma metabolome will be assessed to determine changes in molecules with known immunological functions such as indole derivatives of tryptophan and bile acids following the provision of the intervention. This will be measured via high performance chemical isotope labeling liquid chromatography mass spectrometry platform. | 8 & 21 days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L. reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on host immune response. | Host immune responses will be measured in blood samples by quantifying IgA, selected cytokines, and white blood cell phenotyping using flow cytometry. Mononuclear cells will be isolated from whole blood on ficoll gradients and the ability of cells to respond to challenges (peptidoglycan, phytohemagglutinin, and lipopolysaccharide) will be determined ex vivo. | 8 & 21 days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L. reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on changes in psychological mood state. | Changes in individual mood state will be measured by the profile of mood states questionnaire (scored between -32 and 200; lower scores indicate more stable mood profiles). | 21 days | |
| Secondary | Effect of L. reuteri strains and the non-industrialized-type diet on changes in gastrointestinal symptoms. | Changes in individual gastrointestinal symptoms will be measured by a gastrointestinal symptom questionnaire (scored on a scale of 0-5; higher scores indicating more symptoms). | 21 days |
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