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Microbiome

Centenarian microbiome signature

DEMikrobiom-Signatur von Hundertjährigen

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Several studies of extreme longevity — notably the Italian group led by Biagi and Franceschi analysing semi-supercentenarians (105–109 years) and Sato and colleagues in Japanese centenarians — have identified microbiota features that distinguish long-lived individuals from healthy younger or elderly controls. Consistent observations include maintenance of relatively high alpha diversity into extreme old age, enrichment of Christensenellaceae and Akkermansia muciniphila, and a distinctive secondary bile acid profile characterised by elevated concentrations of isoallo-lithocholic acid (isoallo-LCA) produced by Odoribacteraceae family members, which potently induces regulatory T cells and may attenuate systemic inflammation. Whether these signatures are causal contributors to longevity, passenger effects of specific diets or genetics in long-lived populations, or results of survivor bias — those who reach 100+ have presumably already escaped the diseases that kill others earlier — cannot be determined from cross-sectional data. The findings are intriguing and point toward bile-acid–microbiota crosstalk and immune regulation as longevity-associated pathways, but should not yet be interpreted as actionable targets for the general population.

Sources

  1. Biagi E, Franceschi C, Rampelli S, Severgnini M, Ostan R, Turroni S, et al.. (2016). Gut Microbiota and Extreme Longevity. *Current Biology*doi:10.1016/j.cub.2016.03.020