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Dog
study sheds new light on why dietary restriction can lead to a
longer life
Friday 6 April 2007
Changes caused to bugs in the
gut by restricting calorie intake may partly explain why dietary
restriction can extend lifespan, according to new analysis from a
life-long project looking at the effects of dietary restriction
on Labrador Retriever dogs.
Bugs in the gut are known
as gut microbes and they live symbiotically in human and animal
bodies, playing an important role in metabolism. Abnormalities in
some types of gut microbes have recently been linked to diseases
such as diabetes and obesity.
Today's research, published in
the Journal of Proteome Research, was based on a study in which
24 dogs were paired, with one dog in each pair given 25% less
food than the other. Those with a restricted intake of calories
lived, on average, about 1.8 years longer than those with a
greater intake and they had fewer problems with diseases such as
diabetes and osteoarthritis, plus an older median age for onset
of late-life diseases.
The researchers, from Imperial
College London, Nestlé Research Center (NRC) and
Nestlé-Purina, found long-term differences in the
metabolism of the dietary-restricted and non-dietary-restricted
dogs. Metabolic profile plays a key role in determining animals'
response to illness and their susceptibility to disease.
The scientists believe that
differences in the makeup of gut microbes between the two sets of
dogs could partly explain their metabolic differences. The dogs
that were not on a restricted diet had increased levels of
potentially unhealthy aliphatic amines in their urine. These
reflect reduced levels of a nutrient that is essential for
metabolizing fat, known as choline, indicating the presence of a
certain makeup of gut microbe in the dogs. This makeup of gut
microbes has been associated in recent studies with the
development of insulin resistance and obesity.
Professor Jeremy Nicholson from
Imperial College London said: "This fascinating study was
primarily focused on trying to find optimized nutritional regimes
to keep pet animals such as dogs healthy and as long-lived as
possible. However these types of life-long studies can help us
understand human diseases and aging as well, and that is the
added bonus of being able to do long-term non-invasive metabolic
monitoring."
The researchers suggest that
part of the healthier metabolic profiles of dogs on a restricted
diet is related to their changed gut microbial activity, which in
turn contributes to their generally improved health and longer
lifespan. However, they also found that the overall effects of
aging on restricted and non-restricted animals exerted a greater
effect on the metabolic profile than dietary restriction. This in
itself is interesting as the lifelong metabolic trajectories of
large animals had never been studied in this detail before and
such information might be of relevance to aging humans and their
diseases. The team believes that one important outcome of this
work will be the ability to improve the design of products'
nutritional properties that mimic the health benefits of dietary
restriction in pet dogs.
Source:
Imperial College London

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