Bioactive glycans in a microbiome-directed food for children with malnutrition

Nature. 2024 Jan;625(7993):157-165. doi: 10.1038/s41586-023-06838-3. Epub 2023 Dec 13.

Abstract

Evidence is accumulating that perturbed postnatal development of the gut microbiome contributes to childhood malnutrition1-4. Here we analyse biospecimens from a randomized, controlled trial of a microbiome-directed complementary food (MDCF-2) that produced superior rates of weight gain compared with a calorically more dense conventional ready-to-use supplementary food in 12-18-month-old Bangladeshi children with moderate acute malnutrition4. We reconstructed 1,000 bacterial genomes (metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs)) from the faecal microbiomes of trial participants, identified 75 MAGs of which the abundances were positively associated with ponderal growth (change in weight-for-length Z score (WLZ)), characterized changes in MAG gene expression as a function of treatment type and WLZ response, and quantified carbohydrate structures in MDCF-2 and faeces. The results reveal that two Prevotella copri MAGs that are positively associated with WLZ are the principal contributors to MDCF-2-induced expression of metabolic pathways involved in utilizing the component glycans of MDCF-2. The predicted specificities of carbohydrate-active enzymes expressed by their polysaccharide-utilization loci are correlated with (1) the in vitro growth of Bangladeshi P. copri strains, possessing varying degrees of polysaccharide-utilization loci and genomic conservation with these MAGs, in defined medium containing different purified glycans representative of those in MDCF-2, and (2) the levels of faecal carbohydrate structures in the trial participants. These associations suggest that identifying bioactive glycan structures in MDCFs metabolized by growth-associated bacterial taxa will help to guide recommendations about their use in children with acute malnutrition and enable the development of additional formulations.

Publication types

  • Randomized Controlled Trial

MeSH terms

  • Bacteria / genetics
  • Bangladesch
  • Body Weight / genetics
  • Feces / microbiology
  • Food*
  • Gastrointestinal Microbiome* / physiology
  • Genome, Bacterial / genetics
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Malnutrition* / microbiology
  • Metagenome / genetics
  • Polysaccharides* / metabolism
  • Weight Gain

Substances

  • Polysaccharides