GAINESVILLE, Fla. — University of Florida researchers have found that the variety of bacteria in a child’s digestive tract is strongly linked to whether that child develops type 1 diabetes. The connection could eventually give doctors an early test for the condition and a new way to treat the disease that afflicts more than 3 million Americans.
The cause of type 1 diabetes, formerly dubbed juvenile diabetes, has long been a baffling medical mystery. There seems to be little or no genetic element — only 15 percent of those who develop the form of diabetes have an immediate family member with the condition, meaning there is likely a trigger somewhere in the patient’s environment.
According to the UF research, that trigger may be linked to bacteria that live in our digestive tracts. At birth, our digestive tracts are relatively sterile. Even as we take our first breaths, however, we begin to ingest the microbes around us.
Most of us build and maintain a healthy variety of microbes in our gut. They are essential to health, helping to break down food while offering an extra layer of protection for our delicate digestive system.
The new research has shown that type 1 diabetic children lose this balance of bacteria. While healthy children all had very similar microbial mixes, the diabetic children all had erratic combinations with less overall variety.
“Like the famous first line of Tolstoy’s ‘Anna Karenina,’ ‘All happy families are alike; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way,’” said Eric Triplett, chairman of UF’s department of microbiology and cell science and lead author of the study, published online last week by The International Society of Microbial Ecology Journal.
The research tracked the gut bacteria of eight Finnish children — four of whom developed diabetes and four who did not — by using cutting-edge, high-speed genetic analysis to identify and quantify the bacteria present in the children’s bodily waste.
The uniformity of Finland’s gene pool, along with a higher prevalence of type 1 diabetes, makes the Finnish population ideal for genetic research on the condition, said Mark Atkinson, a type 1 diabetes researcher in UF’s department of pathology, immunology and laboratory medicine.
As the diabetic children’s disease progressed, so did the irregular makeup of their gut bacteria.
It’s not clear why the bacteria populations skew in some people. It’s also not entirely clear, Atkinson said, how that unbalanced mix contributes to the disease, which occurs when the body’s own immune system destroys insulin-producing cells in the patient’s pancreas.
One theory holds that the lack of a stable bacterial mix leaves the wall of the digestive tract weak. This allows unusually large and complex proteins into the bloodstream. These are then detected by the immune system, causing it to overact and essentially “misfire.”
In this way, the researchers say, an unstable microbial mix may contribute to other immunological diseases, such as Crohn’s disease, celiac disease and multiple sclerosis. Recent research has also shown that gut bacteria are also linked to some cases of obesity.
The bacterial mix seems to begin becoming unstable before the patient begins to show signs of the condition. Tests to evaluate gut bacteria levels could be a useful early indication of disease, and could give doctors an early jump on treatment.
Previous studies using mice have shown that introducing beneficial bacteria – such as the kind commonly found in active-culture yogurt – can help correct the microbial mix and help stave off the onset of type 1 diabetes.
“It won’t be as easy as feeding a patient yogurt,” Triplett said. “But if we could develop a system of profiling someone’s gut microbiome, then maybe we can develop a system for correcting or at least modifying it, as well.”
Universty of Florida News, 12 January 2010
This interests me Denny, as my T1 daughter has unexplained chronic diarrhea. It could be caused by autonomic neuropathy, but this seems unlikely in someone who has only had T1 for 5 years. I Googled "Diabetic Diarrhea" and it seems to be a common and not well understood problem.
ReplyDeleteMark,
ReplyDeleteHave probiotic foods and supplements and added prebiotic soluble fiber helped your daughter's diarrhea?
Much of my missionary zeal about probiotic yogurt stems from the fact that my two year-old son has not had a single outbreak of eczema since I started feeding him probiotic yogurt five months ago. Many people find relief from diarrhea with probiotics.
I have been reading about the gut pathogen Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP) and its possible role in the pathology of T1 diabetes and Crohn's. Are you familiar with this research? You might find this article interesting: http://www.gutpathogens.com/content/2/1/1
Be well.
This report fully supports your own work with gut flora and probiotic yogurt. For a long time now I have been a believer in the importance of a healthy gut flora as a requisite for good health.
ReplyDeleteI have learned so much from this site for which I am very deeply grateful for.
I believe that thanks to my location (Cyprus) there are available such a vast number of the healthiest yogurts in the shops that I have not needed to make some at home. I have only needed to develop consumption of them as a daily staple. Not so difficult to do given that they taste great and that I have always enjoyed the unfruited taste. I would often mix some 'mountain' honey with it before being diagnosed with type II about 8 months ago.
Nico
I have seen similar reports, but with a different hypothesis. Not that the wrong bacteria cause inflamation. It was the lack of diversity caused young peoples immune systems to be "unchallenged" so the immune system turned on the body's organs. Feeding parasitic worms to diabetic prone mice prevented the diabetes.
ReplyDeleteThe old "eating dirt" is good idea.
Dr. K,
ReplyDeleteI prefer probiotic yogurt for breakfast to parasitic worms. But, if it's worms you want, you might enjoy this article about helminths.
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/33318.php
As for eating dirt, Chinese dirt tends to be seasoned with heavy metals, chemical fertilizers and pesticide residues. Maybe you have better flavors in Wyoming.
BTW, I too am a believer in the hygiene theory and think a balance of bugs modulates the immune system. For those who are still fearful of alien invasion, however, you might want to read this article hypothesizing that T1 diabetes may be caused by MAP bacteria.
http://www.gutpathogens.com/content/2/1/1
Great blog! I just stumbled upon it... do you plan on keeping it up? (fingers crossed).
ReplyDeleteThanks, Trace. I'll be back after Christmas. I am exploring the consequences of dramatic loss of diversity in human gut flora. Why? What are the consequences? I will postulate that it is driving a lot of chronic disease.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing the information. its true that the diabetic children suffer a lot as the microbial mix doesn't happen. It also weak the immune system.
ReplyDelete