Effects of chronic exercise on gut microbiota and intestinal barrier in human with type 2 diabetes
- PMID: 30667205
- DOI: 10.23736/S0026-4806.18.05589-1
Effects of chronic exercise on gut microbiota and intestinal barrier in human with type 2 diabetes
Abstract
Background: Intestinal dysbiosis has been proposed as a possible contributor of the development of type 2 diabetes (T2D). Indeed, commensal fungi and opportunistic bacteria stimulate the local immune system, altering intestinal permeability with consequent leaky gut, which in turn activates systemic inflammation responsible for insulin resistance. It is also well known that chronic exercise improves glucose control and diabetes-induced damage. The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of chronic exercise on gut flora composition and leaky gut in T2D stable patients.
Methods: Thirty clinically stable patients with T2D were studied before and after a six months program of endurance, resistance and flexibility training. Metabolic and anthropometric evaluations were carried out. Gut flora and intestinal permeability were measured in stools by selective agar culture medium and molecular biology measurements of zonulin, which is the protein that modulates enterocyte tight junctions.
Results: Diabetes causes significant intestinal mycetes overgrowth, increased intestinal permeability and systemic low-grade inflammation. However, exercise improved glycemia, functional and anthropometric variables. Moreover, chronic exercise reduced intestinal mycetes overgrowth, leaky gut, and systemic inflammation. Interestingly, these variables are closely correlated.
Conclusions: Exercise controls diabetes by also modifying intestinal microbiota composition and gut barrier function. This data shows an additional mechanism of chronic exercise and suggests that improving gut flora could be an important step in tailored therapies of T2D.
Comment in
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Gut microbiota and chronic exercise in diabetic patients: not only bacteria.Minerva Med. 2020 Aug;111(4):373. doi: 10.23736/S0026-4806.19.06090-7. Epub 2019 May 6. Minerva Med. 2020. PMID: 31081308 No abstract available.
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