PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Restricted diet triggers individualized microbiome shifts without community convergence

2025-07-22
(Press-News.org) How much can six days of eating just oats, milk, and water change your gut microbiome? 

According to a recent exploratory study published in eGastroenterology, the answer is more complex than expected. Researchers from KU Leuven and collaborating institutions conducted a tightly controlled dietary intervention, known as the "Oatmeal Study", to examine whether restricting food variety could induce convergence in the gut microbiota across individuals. Surprisingly, while participants' diets became nearly identical, their microbiomes did not follow suit. It highlights the importance of individualized responses and underscores the limitations of one-size-fits-all approaches in microbiota-targeted dietary interventions.

The 21-day study followed 18 healthy adults from Flanders, Belgium. It was structured into three phases: a 7-day baseline with habitual diets, a 6-day intervention where participants consumed only oat flakes, whole milk, and still water, and an 8-day follow-up where normal diets resumed. Daily stool samples and weekly blood draws were collected, enabling quantitative microbiome profiling through 16S rRNA gene sequencing paired with flow cytometry. Participants also maintained detailed food diaries, allowing the researchers to link dietary intake with microbial and metabolic outcomes. Notably, microbiome analysis accounted for the estimated 2-day lag between ingestion and egestion, enhancing data accuracy.

Key Findings

Dietary Convergence Achieved The intervention significantly reduced food intake diversity. Analysis confirmed a sharp drop in dietary variation during the 6-day oat-only phase. Macronutrient intake also declined, with calories reduced by 31.5%, and significant decreases in fat, protein, and carbohydrate consumption. Interestingly, fibre intake increased due to the oat-based diet.

Microbiome Did Not Converge Across Individuals One of the study's most surprising findings was the lack of interindividual convergence in gut microbiota. Instead of becoming more similar, microbiome profiles remained distinct and, in some cases, became even more divergent. The effect size (ES) of the dietary intervention on genus-level microbiome variation was 3.4%, but with a striking interindividual range (1.67–16.42%). This undermines the long-held notion that uniform dietary input will yield uniform microbial outcomes and supports the view that host-specific factors such as genetics, baseline microbiota, and metabolic capacity dominate responses to dietary modulation.

Shift Toward Potentially Dysbiotic Enterotype A notable shift was observed in microbial community structure. The prevalence of the Bacteroides2 (Bact2) enterotype—often associated with dysbiosis—increased significantly during the intervention, while the more stable Bacteroides1 (Bact1) community declined. These changes were reversed after participants resumed their normal diets. This Bact2 dominance coincided with a marked drop in Faecalibacterium, a butyrate-producing genus known for its anti-inflammatory properties. Given its association with reduced microbial diversity and inflammatory states, the transient rise of Bact2 raises concerns about the health effects of such restrictive diets.

Microbial Load and Diversity Decreased Faecal microbial load fell by more than 30% during the intervention, without changes in stool moisture or transit time. This aligns with the reduced caloric intake observed and echoes prior findings showing decreased bacterial biomass under caloric restriction. Furthermore, overall microbiome diversity—as measured by the Shannon index—dropped significantly during the intervention, a pattern that correlates with less mature and resilient microbial ecosystems.

 Individual Microbiomes Reacted Uniquely Despite the group-level trends, individuals responded very differently to the same diet. Some showed marked changes in microbial composition, while others remained relatively stable. The authors attempted to identify predictive factors, such as gender or baseline microbiota diversity, but no clear predictors emerged after correction for multiple testing. This unpredictability reinforces the complexity of host–microbiota interactions and suggests that personal traits, rather than just diet, drive microbial changes. Personalized nutrition may be essential to achieving targeted microbiome modulation.

Interpretations and Implications

The findings from this study challenge the intuitive belief that simplification of diet should naturally lead to convergence in microbial communities. Instead, they illustrate the resilience of individual microbiota and the importance of pre-existing microbial states in shaping responses to environmental changes. It highlights: (1) Personalized Diets Over Universal Prescriptions: Even under tightly controlled dietary conditions, individuals show unique microbial responses. Future interventions should consider personalized baseline assessments to guide dietary recommendations; (2) Caution in Using Enterotypes as Biomarkers: While Bact2 has been linked with dysbiosis and disease, its transient appearance here in healthy individuals suggests caution when interpreting enterotypes as fixed or pathological markers; (3) Beyond Calories and Macronutrients: The study supports the concept of "successional maturation" of the microbiome, where microbial development is shaped not just by nutrient intake, but also by substrate diversity and transit time. These factors may be equally important as caloric content in shaping gut health.

In conclusion, the "Oatmeal Study" underscores that even radical reductions in dietary diversity do not necessarily bring about uniformity in gut microbiota. Instead, the human microbiome exhibits resilience and individuality, governed by complex host–microbe dynamics. While dietary convergence increased the prevalence of a potentially dysbiotic community type and reduced microbial diversity, the overall effect was modest and highly variable between individuals. These insights are essential for the design of future microbiome-targeted interventions, which must account for individual variability and ecological context.

 

See the article:

Vermeulen A, Bootsma E, Proost S, et al. Dietary convergence induces individual responses in faecal microbiome composition. eGastroenterology 2025;3:e100161. doi:10.1136/ egastro-2024-100161

 

About eGastroenterology

eGastroenterology is a new, open-access, and open peer-reviewed BMJ Journal, which focuses on basic, clinical, translational, and evidence-based medicine research in all areas of gastroenterology (including hepatology, pancreatology, esophagology, and gastrointestinal surgery). eGastroenterology is now indexed by PubMed, Scopus, CAS, DOAJ, Dimensions, OpenAlex, ROAD, and COPE, with more to come!

For more information, please visit: egastroenterology.bmj.com and follow us on Twitter (@eGastro_BMJ).

Sign-up to Email Alerts for eGastroenterology: https://emails.bmj.com/k/Bmj/jausu/egastroenterology

 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

How tickling builds trust: Scientists identify oxytocin’s role in human-rat bonding

2025-07-22
Pleasant tactile stimulation drives social bonding in many animal species, especially mammals. Tactile stimulation forms the basis of the infant-caregiver relationship and often leads to affinity-like behavior, indicating the formation of social bonds. Juvenile-adolescent rats often engage in rough-and-tumble play, during which they emit characteristic ultrasonic vocalizations. These vocalizations, typically in the 50 kHz frequency range, are thought to be associated with pleasurable emotional states. Juvenile adolescent rats also emit 50 kHz ultrasonic vocalizations in response to tickling with human hands, which mimics natural rough-and-tumble play. Moreover, these rats develop a ...

LAHB: A bioplastic that may solve marine plastic pollution problem

2025-07-22
Researchers have demonstrated a new eco-friendly plastic that decomposes in deep ocean conditions. In a deep-sea experiment, the microbially synthesized poly(d-lactate-co-3-hydroxybutyrate) (LAHB) biodegraded, while conventional plastics such as a representative bio-based polylactide (PLA) persisted. Submerged 855 meters underwater, LAHB films lost over 80% of their mass after 13 months as microbial biofilms actively broke down the material. This real-world test establishes LAHB as a safer biodegradable plastic, supporting global efforts to reduce marine plastic waste. ...

The Holobiont Revolution: How wheat is becoming more climate-resilient through nature-based plant breeding and machine learning

2025-07-22
Nitrogen fertilizers used in agriculture contribute significantly to global warming. A new breeding concept, specifically for wheat, could help reduce nitrogen fertilization. This holobiont principle places the complex interactions between plants and soil microbiomes at the center of plant breeding. In combination with machine learning, this could lead to the use of new wheat varieties, as well as other crops, that are more resilient to climate change and contribute to soil health. Two recent studies led by Wolfram Weckwerth from the University of Vienna have been published in the journals Plant Biotechnology and Trends in Plant Science. To increase the supply ...

International radiology consensus outlines best practices for post-COVID CT

2025-07-22
OAK BROOK, Ill. – Experts representing multiple societies and institutions across 14 countries have published guidance for computed tomography (CT) imaging in patients with residual lung abnormalities after COVID-19 illness. The consensus statement appears today in Radiology, a journal of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA). The statement’s authors seek to standardize the indications for when chest CT is appropriate for patients with post–COVID-19 condition, the methods for acquiring images and the terminology used for reporting residual ...

Yellowstone aspen showing signs of recovery following 1995 reintroduction of wolves to park

2025-07-22
CORVALLIS, Ore. – Yellowstone National Park is celebrating an ecological milestone along with a key anniversary this summer, Oregon State University researchers report. A paper published today in Forest Ecology and Management documents the first new generation of overstory aspen trees in Yellowstone’s northern range in 80 years, three decades after wolves were reintroduced to the nation’s oldest national park. Without predation pressure from wolves, which had been extirpated from the park by 1930, elk populations grew to the point that their browsing was thwarting the growth of young aspen. The ecosystem effects ...

Post-COVID-related lung abnormalities almost always regress

2025-07-22
Visible on chest CT scans, post-COVID-19 residual lung abnormalities, which affect up to 50% of patients who have had an infection requiring hospitalization, may be associated with persistent or progressive respiratory symptoms and are often related to changes in respiratory function tests. But unlike other non-infectious abnormalities, they tend to stabilize or regress over time, indicating that they are non-progressive and only post-infectious in nature. Published in the journal Radiology, the paper is the result of a multi-society consensus statement developed by 21 chest radiologists belonging to the European Society of Thoracic Imaging (ESTI), the Society ...

City of Hope research spotlight, June 2025

2025-07-22
LOS ANGELES — City of Hope® Research Spotlight offers a glimpse into groundbreaking scientific and clinical discoveries advancing lifesaving cures for patients with cancer, diabetes and other chronic, life-threatening diseases. Each spotlight features research-related news, such as recognitions, collaborations and the latest research defining the future of medical treatment.  This roundup highlights a new drug combination that slows the spread of advanced prostate cancer, a novel artificial intelligence (AI) conversation ...

SwRI completes 8-year-long NEXTCAR energy efficiency project

2025-07-22
SAN ANTONIO — July 22, 2025 — Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) has successfully completed its ambitious eight-year-long connected and automated (CAV) vehicle technology project. As part of the Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy’s (ARPA-E) NEXTCAR (NEXT-Generation Energy Technologies for Connected and Automated On-Road Vehicles) program, SwRI developed an automated vehicle that combines CAV technology and SAE Level 4 automation to demonstrate up to 30% energy savings compared to traditional hybrid vehicles, without modifications to the powertrain hardware. The completed SwRI ...

Investigational anti-cancer DNA therapy eases chronic osteoarthritis pain in dogs—pointing to a new non-opioid path for humans

2025-07-22
BOSTON: Elenagen™, a novel DNA plasmid therapy that previously demonstrated high clinical benefit and low toxicity in cancer patients, has now shown significant promise in alleviating chronic pain demonstrating a 90% success rate. In a peer-reviewed study published in Frontiers in Veterinary Science (DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2025.1519881), Elenagen reduced osteoarthritis pain scores in companion dogs. Because the same pro-inflammatory cytokine loop drives osteoarthritis and other chronic pain states, the findings offer ...

US adolescents with cannabis use disorder failing to complete rehabilitation

2025-07-22
Cannabis use disorder in adolescents in the United States remains a growing threat despite declines in cannabis use. Many adolescents begin using cannabis before high school during crucial stages of brain development, which may pose short- and long-term risks for cognitive, academic and social challenges. Although behavioral therapies show promise, there is still limited understanding of what truly drives recovery in teens. With treatment often sought only after serious problems emerge, identifying who succeeds – and why – is essential to developing more effective and targeted ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UTA unveils supercomputing research hub

Americans prefer a more diverse society

Masonic Medical Research Institute publishes breakthrough study on combating heart disease linked to obesity and high-fat diet

How our body keeps time in the heat

Not just a messenger: Developing nano-sized delivery agents that also provide therapeutic treatment

AI used for real-time selection of actionable messages for government and public health campaigns

Sorting without comparators: The rise of intelligent memory systems

Access to green spaces may be linked to lower risk of neurodevelopmental disorders in children

Teens are using dating apps more than you’d think. It may not be a bad thing.

AI chatbots remain overconfident -- even when they’re wrong

From hydrogen bonds to high performance: The future of aqueous batteries

Ancient brachiopods used tiny bristles to maintain “social distancing,” study reveals

320 million trees are killed by lightning each year — Considerable biomass loss

Research alert: Gene signature an early warning system for aggressive pancreatic cancer, study finds

The Covid-19 pandemic may have aged our brains, according to a new study

Pitt study uncovers how the immune system fends off gut parasites

Tiny fossil suggests spiders and their relatives originated in the sea

Psychological and physical health of a preterm birth cohort at age 35

Leading the way comes at a cost for feathered friends

Psychedelics and cannabis offer treatment hope for people with eating disorders

Answer ALS launches AI drug development collaboration with GATC Health, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, and Tulane to advance ALS treatment discovery

Restricted diet triggers individualized microbiome shifts without community convergence

How tickling builds trust: Scientists identify oxytocin’s role in human-rat bonding

LAHB: A bioplastic that may solve marine plastic pollution problem

The Holobiont Revolution: How wheat is becoming more climate-resilient through nature-based plant breeding and machine learning

International radiology consensus outlines best practices for post-COVID CT

Yellowstone aspen showing signs of recovery following 1995 reintroduction of wolves to park

Post-COVID-related lung abnormalities almost always regress

City of Hope research spotlight, June 2025

SwRI completes 8-year-long NEXTCAR energy efficiency project

[Press-News.org] Restricted diet triggers individualized microbiome shifts without community convergence