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Acute Sleep-Wake Cycle Shift Results in Community Alteration of Human Gut Microbiome

Zhi Liu, Zhi-Yuan Wei, Junyu Chen, Kun Chen, Xuhua Mao, Qisha Liu, Yu Sun, Zixiao Zhang, Yue Zhang, Dan Zhou, Jun‐Ming Tang, Lianhong Qin, Jian‐Huan Chen, Xingyin Liu

2020mSphere91 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Circadian rhythm misalignment due to social jet lag, shift work, early morning starts, and delayed bedtimes is becoming common in our modern society. Disturbances of sleep and the underlying circadian rhythms are related to multiple human diseases, such as obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disorders, and cognitive impairments. Given the crucial role of microbiota in the same pathologies as are caused by sleep disturbance, how the gut microbiota is affected by sleep is of increasing interest. The results of this study indicate that the acute circadian rhythm disturbance caused by sleep-wake shifts affect the human gut microbiota, especially the functional profiles of gut microbes and interactions among them. Further experiments with a longer-time-scale intervention and larger sample size are needed to assess the effects of chronic circadian rhythm disruption on the gut microbiome and to guide possible microbial therapies for clinical intervention in the related diseases.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeGut microbiomeWakeSleep (system call)MedicineBiologyBioinformaticsComputer scienceEngineeringAerospace engineeringOperating systemGut microbiota and healthDiet and metabolism studiesSleep and related disorders