Impact of Diet on the Gut-Muscle Axis in Older Adults

Purpose

Muscle health declines during aging. One factor that may impact muscle health is the community of bacteria that live in our intestines, but studies aimed at improving muscle health by targeting the gut in older adults are sparse. The primary goal of this study is to use a diet that is enriched in soluble fiber, which is exclusively utilized by gut bacteria to make substances that can impact muscle health, to improve muscle-related measures in older adults.

Conditions

  • Sarcopenia
  • Dietary Exposure
  • Microbial Colonization

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Over 65 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Inclusion Criteria

  1. Independently living older adults (> 65y) 2. Sedentary (Godin-Shepard Leisure Time Physical Activity Questionnaire score < 10) 3. Non-smoking 4. Not already consuming a high-fiber diet (> 22, 28 g/day for women, men) 5. Free of gastrointestinal disease (gastrointestinal cancer, inflammatory bowel disease, bariatric surgery, irritable bowel syndrome) 6. Fluent in English 7. Willing to attend three study visits (enrollment, baseline, and week-13) 8. Willing to consume an abundance of fruits, vegetables, nuts/seeds 9. Willing to consume an abundance of soluble fiber-rich foods (broccoli, brussels sprouts, flaxseeds sweetened with dates, lima beans, butternut squash, carrots, collard greens) 10. Willing to tolerate mild gastrointestinal discomfort (bloating, belly grumbling, flatulence). Note that all attempts will be made to replace foods that may trigger these issues. 11. Willing to not consume antibiotics during the 13-week study 12. Willing to not schedule a colonoscopy during the 13-week study

Exclusion Criteria

  1. Unwilling to visit the Tufts Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (HNRCA) 3x/week to pick up the pre-prepared study diet 2. Unwilling to only consume the provided food (unsweetened tea and/or black coffee are allowed) 3. Food allergies related to foods that are included in the study 4. Chewing problems 5. Unwilling to wear a daily step counter (pedometer) 6. Unwilling to complete a daily questionnaire that will assess gastrointestinal comfort 7. Malnutrition (BMI < 18.5 kg/m2) 8. Use of supplemental probiotics or antibiotics, participation in an investigational drug evaluation, or a recent change in habitual medication use within the 1 month-period prior to the screening visit 9. > 5% weight loss or weight gain within the past 6-months 10. A recent history of alcohol abuse (within the past 5 years) 11. A history of any significant injury or surgery that currently affects physical functioning and ability to perform physical function testing 12. Treatment with immunosuppressive drugs 13. A prior diagnosis of organ failure (heart, liver, renal, respiratory) 14. Diabetes mellitus (type 1, or type 2 with insulin therapy) 15. Chronic kidney disease (eGFR ≤ 30 mL/min/1.73 m2) 16. Overt disease (cancer, dementia, cardiovascular disease) 17. Chronic use of anti-inflammatory medication (corticosteroids) 18. Already enrolled in another research study 19. Active infection, including Tuberculosis , HIV, malaria, hepatitis, shingles, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA), SARS-CoV-2 20. Any major illness or condition that may interfere with study outcomes at the discretion of the study physician 21. Won't remain in Boston for the 13-week study duration 22. Unwilling to complete a daily checklist aimed at quantifying the amount of food eaten on the study diet

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Intervention Model Description
24 older adults (> 65y) will be randomized to consume a high- or low-soluble fiber diet
Primary Purpose
Treatment
Masking
Quadruple (Participant, Care Provider, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Other
Low-soluble fiber diet
  • Other: Low-soluble fiber diet
    12 older adults (>65y) will be randomized to consume the USDA Guidelines for fiber intake (10g of total fiber/1000 calories), as the low-soluble fiber diet
Active Comparator
High-soluble fiber diet
  • Other: High-soluble fiber diet
    12 older adults (>65y) will be randomized to consume 34-35g of total fiber/1000 calories, as the high-soluble fiber diet

Recruiting Locations

Jean Mayer Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University
Boston, Massachusetts 02111
Contact:
Michael S Lustgarten, PhD

More Details

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
Tufts University

Study Contact

Michael S Lustgarten, PhD
646 600 0124
michael.lustgarten@tufts.edu

Detailed Description

During aging, skeletal muscle mass and physical function decrease, whereas levels of lipids and adipocytes increase within and between muscle cells, thereby worsening muscle composition. As a result of these age-related changes, older adults are at a higher risk for frailty, falls and fracture, disability and hospitalization, and all-cause mortality. Accordingly, elucidation of mechanisms that underlie muscle mass, muscle composition, and physical function, and interventions that positively affect these variables will be important for addressing the public health priority of an improved quality of life and healthy aging in older adults. The gut microbiome and its metabolic products are involved in mechanisms that impact skeletal muscle mass, muscle composition, and physical function, which has been defined as the gut-muscle axis. For example, muscle mass and physical function are reduced in animals that do not have a microbiome (germ-free mice), and in antibiotic-treated mice, an intervention that reduces gut bacterial content. Investigating further, gut bacteria-derived metabolites affect muscle mass, muscle composition, and physical function in young and aged animals, including positive effects for the short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) acetate, propionate, and butyrate, and negative effects for indoxyl sulfate (IS) and para-cresol sulfate (PCS). Similarly, phenol sulfate (PS) and phenylacetylglutamine (PAG) are gut microbiome-derived metabolites that were associated with poor muscle composition and worse physical function in studies of older adult humans that were published by our group. Interestingly, higher colonic levels of SCFAs are associated with a lower pH, an important finding because growth of Enterobacteriaceae, a bacterial family that contains genes involved in the production of IS, PCS, PS, and PAG, is limited in an acidic environment and following exposure to physiological levels of SCFAs. Taken together, these data suggest that interventions aimed at increasing bacterial SCFA production may be an important approach for improving muscle-related measures in older adults. Soluble fiber fermentation by gut bacteria results in the formation of acetate, propionate, and butyrate, and fecal SCFAs proportionally increase, whereas circulating levels of IS and PCS are reduced in response to high-soluble fiber diets. As a proof of concept, fecal and circulating levels of SCFAs, muscle mass, and aerobic exercise capacity were increased in young mice that were fed a relatively higher soluble fiber diet, but few studies have attempted this approach in older adult humans. When considering that fecal levels of SCFAs decrease during aging, whereas plasma levels of IS, PCS, PS, and PAG increase, these data collectively suggest that a high-soluble fiber diet may be an important approach for improving muscle-related measures in older adults humans. To test this hypothesis, older adults will be randomized to consume a high- or low-soluble fiber diet for 12-weeks.