Faecal microbiota of schoolchildren is associated with nutritional status and markers of inflammation: a double-blinded cluster-randomized controlled trial using multi-micronutrient fortified rice

Yohannes Seyoum, Valérie Greffeuille, Dorgeles Kouakou Dje Kouadio, Khov Kuong, Williams Turpin, Rachida M’Rabt, Vincent Chochois, Sonia Fortin, Marlène Perignon, Marion Fiorentino, Jacques Berger, Kurt Burja, Maiza Campos Ponce, Chhoun Chamnan, Frank T. Wieringa, Christèle Humblot*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Faecal microbiota plays a critical role in human health, but its relationship with nutritional status among schoolchildren remains under-explored. Here, in a double-blinded cluster-randomized controlled trial on 380 Cambodian schoolchildren, we characterize the impact of six months consumption of two types of rice fortified with different levels of vitamins and minerals on pre-specified outcomes. We investigate the association between the faecal microbiota (16SrRNA sequencing) and age, sex, nutritional status (underweight, stunting), micronutrient status (iron, zinc and vitamin A deficiencies, anaemia, iron deficient anaemia, hemoglobinopathy), inflammation (systemic, gut), and parasitic infection. We show that the faecal microbiota is characterised by a surprisingly high proportion of Lactobacillaceae. We discover that deficiencies in specific micronutrients, such as iron and vitamin A, correlate with particular microbiota profiles, whereas zinc deficiency shows no such association. The nutritional intervention with the two rice treatments impacts both the composition and functions predicted from compositional analysis in different ways. (ClinicalTrials.gov

Original languageEnglish
Article number5204
Pages (from-to)1-12
Number of pages12
JournalNature Communications
Volume15
Early online date18 Jun 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.

Funding

FundersFunder number
Royal University of Phnom
Kampong Speu Health and Education Department
WFP
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Institut de recherche pour le développement
National center for malaria
FAS10.608, FFE-442-2012/03800

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