Regular exercising early in life can alter a teeming menagerie of over 100 trillion microbes in the gut, which may promote healthy brain function and improve metabolic activities over the course of a lifetime, a new study has found.
The research at the University of Colorado Boulder in US indicates that there may be a window of opportunity during early human development to optimise the chances of better lifelong health.
"Exercise affects many aspects of health, both metabolic and mental, and people are only now starting to look at the plasticity of these gut microbes," said senior author Monika Fleshner, a professor at the University of Colorado Boulder's Department of Integrative Physiology.
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These microbes can add as many 5 million genes to a person's overall genetic profile and thus have tremendous power to influence aspects of human physiology.
While this diverse microbial community remains somewhat malleable throughout adult life and can be influenced by environmental factors such as diet and sleep patterns, the researchers found that gut microorganisms are especially 'plastic' at a young age.
The study found that juvenile rats who voluntarily exercised every day developed a more beneficial microbial structure, including the expansion of probiotic bacterial species in their gut compared to both their sedentary counterparts and adult rats, even when the adult rats exercised as well.
The researchers have not, as of yet, pinpointed an exact age range when the gut microbe community is likely to change, but the preliminary findings indicate that earlier is better.
A robust, healthy community of gut microbes also appears to promote healthy brain function and provide anti-depressant effects, Fleshner said.
Previous research has shown that the human brain responds to microbial signals from the gut, though the exact communication methods are still under investigation.
"Future research on this microbial ecosystem will hone in on how these microbes influence brain function in a long-lasting way," said lead author Agniezka Mika, a graduate researcher at the Department of Integrative Physiology.
The study was published in the journal Immunology and Cell Biology.