Ultra-Endurance Triathlon Competition Shifts Fecal Metabolome Independent of Changes to Microbiome Composition.

Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)(2023)

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摘要
Understanding changes to gut microbiota composition and metabolic output in response to acute exercise may be necessary for understanding the mechanisms mediating the long-term health and performance benefits of exercise. Our primary objective was to characterize acute changes in the fecal microbiome and metabolome following participation in an ultra-endurance (3.9km swim, 180.2km bike, 42.2km run) triathlon. An exploratory aim was to determine associations between athlete-specific factors (race performance [i.e., completion time] and lifetime years of endurance training) with pre-race gut microbiota and metabolite profiles. Stool samples from 12 triathletes (9M/3F; 43±14 yrs, 23±2 kg/m) were collected ≤48 hours before and the first bowel movement following race completion. Intra- and inter-individual diversity of bacterial species and individual bacterial taxa were unaltered following race completion (P>0.05). However, significant reductions (P<0.05) in free and secondary bile acids (DCA, 12-ketoLCA) and short-chain fatty acids (butyric and pivalic acids), and significant increases (P<0.05) in long-chain fatty acids (oleic and palmitoleic acids) were observed. Exploratory analyses revealed several associations between pre-race bacterial taxa and fecal metabolites with race performance and lifetime history of endurance training (P<0.05). These findings suggest that 1) acute ultra-endurance exercise shifts microbial metabolism independent of changes to community composition and 2) athlete performance level and training history relate to resting-state gut microbial ecology.
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fecal metabolome,microbiome composition,ultra-endurance
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