Bacteria growing naturally in the human gut could be playing a decisive role in determining whether someone becomes overweight or obese, according to a remarkable study involving laboratory mice fed with bacterial gut fauna from fat and thin people.
The results support earlier studies showing that gut bacteria, which are more numerous than the cells of the human body, probably play a significant role in boosting or cutting the risk of someone putting on weight.
In the latest study, scientists isolated gut bacteria from identical and non-identical twins, where one sibling was obese and the other was lean, and found that the bacteria caused mice to become lean or overweight depending on whether they received the bacteria from the lean or obese twin respectively.
The scientists also found which bacterial species are involved. The microbial group known as the Bacteroides, for example, was more prevalent in lean individuals and was also found to play a protective role against fat accumulation in mice fed on certain diets.