ZOE Science & Nutrition - Your Gut is Full of Bugs: Why This is Great News
Episode Date: April 28, 2022You may have heard there are bugs in your gut. But do they matter? Today, the evidence shows the answer is a resounding yes. This ecosystem of tiny microbes living in our bodies is one of the most e...xciting areas in medical research, linked to everything from metabolic to mental health. So while many of us have heard that gut health is essential, few of us understand why and what we should do to support our gut bacteria. In this episode, Jonathan speaks with Will Bulsiewicz to find out when our microbiome begins to form, the most effective ways to support our gut health, and the role these gut bacteria play in controlling our weight. Will Bulsiewicz is a board-certified gastroenterologist, and New York Times bestselling author of the microbiome book Fiber Fueled. Download our FREE guide — Top 10 Tips to Live Healthier: https://zoe.com/freeguide Timecodes: 00:00 - Intro 00:11 - Topic introduction 01:29 - Quickfire questions 02:55 - What is the microbiome? 08:51 - The role of the microbiome? 11:52 - The microbiome as an organ? 17:01 - Why does the microbiome matter? 21:01 - How does the microbiome affect our metabolism and weight? 24:12 - Do we have a microbiome before we are born? How does it develop? 32:44 - What can you do to improve your gut health? 35:55 - Analyzing the microbiome to know more about your relationships 39:24 - 3 health tips to improve our microbiomes 41:42 - Summary 44:40 - Outro Episode transcripts are available here. Follow Will: https://www.instagram.com/theguthealthmd/ Follow ZOE on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zoe/ This podcast was produced by Fascinate Productions.
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Welcome to ZOE Science and Nutrition,
where world-leading scientists explain how their research can improve your health.
You may have heard there are bugs in your gut, but do they matter?
Only 20 years ago, the answer from scientists was no.
Today, new evidence shows the answer is a resounding yes.
This ecosystem of tiny microbes living in our bodies is one of the most exciting areas
in medical research, linked to everything from metabolic to mental health.
So while many of us have heard that gut health is essential, few of us understand why and
what we should do to support our gut bacteria.
In this episode, I'm joined by regular contributor Will Bulsiewicz to find out.
Will is a board-certified gastroenterologist and New York Times best-selling author of the microbiome book, Fiber Fueled.
He is perfectly placed to give us an introduction to the wild world of the microbiome. We start at the beginning, finding out when our microbiome begins to form and ending with
the simplest and most effective ways to support our gut health.
Along the way, we discover the remarkable ways our romantic relationships affect our
microbiome and the role these gut bacteria play in controlling our weight.
Will, thank you for joining me again today. It's a pleasure to be here. Thank you for having me.
Always fun. Why don't we start as we often do with a quick fire round of questions from our
listeners around this topic of the microbiome. Are bacteria bad for us? No, it's actually time for us to re-evaluate because most
bacteria are good. Are there bacteria everywhere in our body? I believe the answer is yes. Our old
techniques of cultures, cultures of blood and urine, have proven to be inadequate. We're
discovering bacteria all over the place, including in our blood. Amazing. I didn't know that. Does
everyone have a gut microbiome?
Every single person. Yes. Every single person throughout human history has had a gut microbiome.
Awesome. So if you're listening, you have one too. Does your gut microbiome affect your health?
Absolutely. Yes. In an extremely powerful way, which we're going to talk about today.
Can gut bacteria change your mood? Yes,
there are studies that indicate that our gut bacteria actually are intertwined with our mood.
Can you change your gut microbiome with food? Yes, 100%. In fact, changes will take place very
quickly. And last quickfire question, can probiotics that you can buy today help your
gut microbiome? In some cases, but in many cases, the hype is outpacing the science.
Brilliant. Thank you for that, Will. And I'm sure we'll come back to many of those questions
as we talk over the next little while. But why don't we start at the very beginning?
What is this microbiome thing?
This microbiome thing is the community of microorganisms that they are there
they are real but they're actually rather difficult for us to acknowledge or even wrap
our mind around because they are invisible to the naked eye they're too small but if we had
a microscope jonathan if you were super nerdy like me and you walked around with a microscope, you could take a look at your thumb and discover as many microbes right there
as there are people in the entire UK. Amazing. And if we were to apply that microscope to
everything that's alive on this planet, we would discover that everything that's alive on this
planet has a microbiome it's not
just us humans the plants have them too the animals have them too and what's the difference
between a microbiome and bacteria what does it mean help us to understand a little bit more
what this thing is so there's different terms that you will see thrown around and to be completely
honest with you i probably at some point during this podcast will be guilty of using these terms interchangeably
when I probably should not. It's an extremely common thing. So the term microbiome is really
referring to the genetic code that exists among this huge community of microorganisms.
These microorganisms, Jonathan, they cover us
from the top of our head to the tip of our toes, the skin, believe it or not, the eyeball,
inside the nose, the mouth, a woman's vagina, even the bladder has a microbiome. But
the main place that you will find these microbes is inside our colon. That's where they're most
densely concentrated.
And the microbiome is the term that we described the genetic material that these microbes living
in the colon basically provide to us. They, believe it or not, have 200 times more genetic
material than we have in our genetic code as humans. Which is amazing. So essentially what
I'm saying is if I look at the whole person, what we'll find is that you are 99.5 microbial
in terms of your genetic code and only 0.5% human. So I'm hardly a human being at all. I'm almost all
microbe from a DNA perspective and just kidding myself that I'm all a human being at all. I'm almost all microbe from like a DNA perspective and just kidding myself that I'm all a human
being because I can't see all of these microbes which are around me and inside me.
You can't see them.
But yet in terms of your DNA, yes, you are less than 1% human in terms of your DNA.
But even in terms of the number of cells that make up your body, I mean, this is, again,
very hard for us to fathom and understand, but at a minimum, if we look at your human cells, we believe that you have about 30 trillion
total cells and there are about 38 trillion microbes in the colon alone.
And so you are less than 50% human.
I think my wife sometimes says that to me when I haven't finished the
washing up, but I think it was for a different meaning. Oh, you animal. Oh, you animal. So,
and actually to introduce another term, an appropriate way to describe us as humans
is actually a super organism, which makes us sound like a superhuman. And in a way we should feel like that
because without these microbes, we would only be capable of so much. And one of the things that
we're going to discuss today is how these microbes have actually taken up residence
and they contribute to the capabilities that we have in terms of our biological functions.
And so we are in fact a superorganism made up of
these microbes. Microbe, by the way, is the word that would describe a single one of these invisible
microorganisms. And microbiota is more describing the entirety or the larger pool or community of
them. And they aren't exclusively bacteria, but they are mainly bacteria, Will. Is that right?
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slash free guide or click the link in the show notes and do let me know what you think of it.
Okay, back to the show. So there's five different types that we would include if we were looking at
the entire picture here, but the bacteria are the principal one. They make up the vast majority of the microbes. And the second most common would be the fungi or yeasts.
So we all have, for example, candida.
Candida is a type of fungi and we all have it.
It's a normal part of our microbiome.
And beyond the fungi,
we also may have these microorganisms called archaea,
which are my personal favorite.
Archaea are not bacteria.
They are not fungi.
They are their own individual thing.
And they, we believe, are the longest lived creatures on the entire planet.
Like far, far, far before we ever had dinosaurs.
Four billion years ago, there were the archaea.
And it's actually quite fascinating to consider this because oxygen has only existed on our
planet in the last 2.5 billion years.
So actually, the archaea were hanging out on this scorched earth for 1.5 billion years
without even having any oxygen.
That's brilliant.
And I think one of the things we're already slipping into doing a little bit is we're talking about microbiome and gut microbiome a little bit interchangeably. And
I think for the rest of today, we're mainly going to talk about the gut microbiome, but it's
definitely worth bearing in mind, as you said, that there are many others. My wife is a dermatologist,
therefore she's really interested in the skin microbiome because that's obviously the most
important thing for her and that's this. But I think today we're mainly going to talk about the gut microbiome. And as you said, this is
by far the most complex microbiome in terms of the number of species. And it's obviously so
interesting for us because of the way that the food we eat interacts with it. So if we are
thinking about that specifically, the gut microbiome, what's it for, right? Why do we
have one? You said that we've had one for as long as there have been human beings.
How comes?
Yeah, let's take a little walk through evolutionary history and consider that the very first human,
whoever this person was, they had a microbiome.
There has never been even a second in the history of humanity that we were free from
our microbiome. So we have coexisted and co-evolved
with these microbes from the very beginning. We rose and we fell together. And when we live
and when we thrive, the good news is that they get fed and they can thrive as a result of that.
And so as we went through human evolution together, what happens, and this is very clear
if you look at this from a scientific perspective, is that we grew to trust these microbes.
And the reason why is because they are more quickly adaptable.
We as humans, we are creatures of habit and we are not rapidly adaptable. We can't
change that quick, but our microbes can change. They can change actually very quickly. In fact,
a new generation of them is potentially spawned every 20 minutes. So literally just during the
time that you and I are having this conversation, we are going from something that's a child microbe all the way up
to a great grandparent microbe. And so as we moved through human evolution, we have to consider that
humans radiated out from Africa. And as we radiated out across this globe,
we encountered many different environments that posed their own unique individual challenges. And we were fighting
for survival. And there were no supermarkets to feed us. Many people died of starvation.
And so we needed these microbes basically to help to support this quest for human survival.
And so they took up a very important role, first of all, in digestion of our food, where we
could radiate out across the globe and eat a wide variety of foods in many different
climates and ecosystems and still have the capacity within our digestive system to break
down and process that food.
Our microbes do it for us.
Second of all, they're involved in our metabolism, our immune system, our hormones, our mood,
our brain health, our genetic expression.
And so when you look at this entire picture, just coming from my perspective as a medical
doctor, we're basically talking about everything that matters for human health.
And the part about it that is so bizarre is that what appears to be the most important thing for human health isn't even human.
And we didn't even recognize how important this was until about like less than 20 years ago.
Tell us a bit more about that. And I think one of the questions I love, I've heard other people talk about it, is this idea that maybe we should think about the microbiome
as an organ of the body. Less than 20 years ago, we suddenly discovered the liver, right? And for
all of human history and human science, we never realized we had a liver, which for those of you
who are not doctors listening, for many of us is like, it's quite important, right, Will? Like it's an important thing to have a liver. Is that correct,
in your medical opinion? You cannot sustain human life without a liver.
Okay. So this is the analogy. I'm not a doctor that I've been given. So it's like a really big
deal, but we never knew that it existed until 20 years ago. So I guess two questions. Firstly,
is it fair to talk about it as being like an organ?
And then I guess the follow-on question is, how is it possible we didn't know it existed 20 years
ago? So first of all, it absolutely is fair to talk about it as an organ. In fact, I think that
it's time for us to do that. And there are certainly leaders of science who would agree
with this perspective. An organ is something that plays
a central role in human health and supports our ability to do the things we need to do from a
biological perspective. And so by that definition, very clearly, these microbes, particularly the gut
microbiome, recognizing that once again, we need our microbes for proper digestion,
metabolism, immunity, hormone balance, mood, brain health, and genetic expression. We need them.
And what it would look like without them is not a healthy human being. So in that sense, we have to think of this as an organ. And in that
regard, we should be therefore nurturing the health of that particular organ. This should
be very important to us. Now, why is this like suddenly a brand new discovery? Well,
Jonathan, it's not that we didn't know that there were microbes. That's not the reality. The issue is
that first of all, we didn't have the tools to study them. Because it turns out, I'm going to
get a little bit nerdy for a moment, I hope people don't mind. But there's different types of microbes
and some of them, we call them anaerobic. And anaerobic basically means that they exist in
an environment where there is no oxygen.
This is like your extreme example of your archaea, which we know, you know, like the
relatively small part of what's in our microbiome, but that's your example that they were there even
before there was any oxygen on earth. Yeah, they don't need the oxygen to survive,
which seems weird, because we view that all creatures need oxygen to survive,
but that's not actually true.
So these anaerobic microbes exist in an environment where there is no oxygen. Well,
that actually turns out to be our colon. And so this environment that they're in,
99% of the microbes that are there, they can't grow on a culture plate because that requires us to expose them to oxygen, which actually kills them. So we whacked the tools to study them.
And simultaneously we made assumptions and we all know what happens when we make assumptions.
It often falls, like forces us to fall straight on our face. And so the assumption was these
microbes, yes, they're there, but gosh, like they're responsible for poop and foul smells.
So why would we care about that?
And then what happens, Jonathan, is that roughly 2005, 2006, there were two major things that were simultaneously taking place.
We discovered a laboratory technique called 16S RNA that allowed us to, for the first time,
go beyond the culture plate and discover this blooming community of 38 trillion microbes
living inside of us. And the second thing that happened is that the amount of information that exists within a bowel movement is completely overwhelming
to the computers of the 1990s. And we needed faster, stronger computers to actually be able
to handle this amount of information. Because once again, you may think that we are complicated
humans, but from a genetic perspective, we're actually
rather simple compared to the amount of information that exists, again, within a bowel movement.
So better computers, new laboratory techniques, 2005, 2006 happens, and all of a sudden,
whoa, this is amazing. This is crazy. And we spent about 15 years just kind of describing what we were
seeing. But what's really exciting, Jonathan, is that we're entering into the phase where
manipulation of the microbiome is actually becoming a technique that we can apply to medicine to help
us get better outcomes for our patients. So that's really interesting. I think so far,
a listener might
say, okay, you convinced me there's a lot of these things and they're diverse and it's different,
but why do you believe they matter well, right? Like why aren't they just, you know, hitching a
ride? How do we know that actually they have this effect on our health that you were talking about
earlier? Jonathan, we have these examples where manipulation
of the gut microbiome becomes very powerful in terms of the effects that it can have on our body.
And so initially we're doing research studies where we were describing, oh, in the setting of,
for example, lupus or Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis, in the setting of these autoimmune conditions,
we are seeing a change in the microbiome that we would describe as dysbiosis.
Dysbiosis is the word that we use that means that there's a loss of balance within the microbiome.
And if I were to zoom everyone in using a microscope and you would look at what's
happening when there's dysbiosis
essentially there is a loss of the good microbes less good guys there are more bad guys they're
kind of showing up more prominently and then finally there's been damage or injury to the
lining of the intestine and you have broken down the barrier and created what we call increased intestinal permeability,
which some people might call leaky gut. And so this is what exists when a person has dysbiosis.
So first we were describing it. Now we're moving into how do we make it better? And can this be
used to improve, you know, for example, health? And there's a number of examples,
but Jonathan, one of the things that perhaps we will do another Zoe podcast on in the future
is the microbiome and cancer research, where we now have studies. I'm not going to dive too deep
into this because I think it would be much better as a complete episode. But we now have studies where when you give a
fecal transplant in combination with cancer therapy, people do better. When you manipulate
the microbiome with antibiotics and you actually cause harm to the microbiome, people do worse
with their cancer therapy. And so now we're starting to come to a
new era where manipulation of the microbiome is the next phase of us figuring out how we can
actually use this to our advantage for better human health. And I think I should clarify,
right, Will, that you're not saying one should never take antibiotics, because I think that's
one of the important messages we always want to give but to recognize that in certain cases it can have impact without a shadow of a
doubt in my mind the greatest discovery in the history of medicine was the discovery of penicillin
prior to this the top causes of death were all infections if we we go back to prior to World War II, many of the wars
that took place, the soldiers were not actually dying from the bullet wounds. In many cases,
they were dying from the infection that took place after the bullet wound. And so accelerating
up to World War II, this is when penicillin was discovered and it completely changed everything.
And all of us enjoy years that are
added to our life expectancy as a result of antibiotics. They serve their purpose in a
powerful and very important way. The problem that we have is the over-utilization of sterilizing
techniques that could be antibiotics, but it could also be the sterilizing of our food.
And this overutilization of antibiotics when they're not necessary is the problem that exists because not only is that negatively affecting our personal gut microbiome, but the other thing that
it's doing is it's creating resistance to those antibiotics. So antibiotics should be reserved
for situations where we actually truly need them.
And on the same point, you were talking about impacts on various sorts of health.
What's the evidence for the way that it can impact our metabolism and our weight?
Because I think a lot of the initial studies around the microbiome actually restarted in this area, didn't they?
Yeah, they did.
So some of the completely eye-opening studies from around 2006 were that they showed that you could actually transfer a body habitus,
meaning like a body shape, through the microbiome in mice. Let me share a fascinating twin study
where they took two identical human twins and one was obese and one was skinny okay so they have the
same genetic code yet they are not the same in terms of their body habitus one is obese one is
skinny and they actually took a microbiome specimen from these humans and transferred it into mice and then fed these mice the exact same food so
one mouse receives the microbiome from an obese human and the other mouse receives a microbiome
from a skinny human these mice receive the same food and they consume the same number of calories
and yet the mouse that receives the obese microbiome becomes obese
and the mouse that receives the skinny microbiome becomes skinny, even though they're eating the
same number of calories. It challenges in many ways, the calories in calories out paradigm that
many people have been suggesting is everything that matters in terms of our weight balance.
We are more complicated than that. And part of what's necessary when we evaluate our metabolism is to actually look at the gut microbiome. And now here we are. And if we look at, for example,
the measures of our metabolism, our blood lipids, our blood glucose glucose our own research at zoe published in june of 2020 in
nature medicine shows us that the gut microbiome actually plays a very powerful role in the way
that our body for example will have a blood sugar after a meal or how high our blood lipids will
raise after a meal so like with regard to the blood lipids,
our gut microbiome is more important than the food that we are eating.
We can predict a person's elevation of their blood lipids based upon their gut microbiome more powerfully than even what is on the plate in front of them. That's insane.
And that's some of our own research. to keep up the really hard work of creating new episodes each week. So right now, if you could
share a link to the show with one friend who would benefit from today's information,
it would mean a great deal to me. Thank you.
It's amazing, right? And I think if you're listening to this right now, you're like,
okay, so you sort of convinced me, well, these bacteria in my gut, they sound like they're quite
important. I like the idea of getting the bacteria
with the skinny person. I suspect some of them will be saying, and I certainly like the idea
of getting the bacteria of the person who's really healthy and is still looking great when they're
90. I'd like some of what she's having. And we had a lot of questions around sort of the start
of that process. So we had a lot of questions around the microbiome for infants, birth, what's going on
there. So maybe start at the beginning. Do we have a microbiome before we're born?
And what happens during this process and afterwards, Will?
Yes. So this is, I think, such a fascinating study on what it means to be human and the
relationship that we have with our microbes.
So as I walk through this, I think it's going to really open many people's eyes.
First of all, earlier in the episode, you asked me, are microbes everywhere?
And I said, I believe the answer is yes. And part of the reason that I say that is we once
thought that the baby was sterile inside mom's womb.
And now there is new data that has emerged to indicate that the baby already is starting to form their microbiome before they're even born.
So a baby is not completely sterile.
But when mom's water breaks,
the barrier that separates the external world from the baby is now
removed and part of introducing the baby to this new world is exposure to these
microbes because they are everywhere and in a traditional sense a baby would pass
through the birth canal and come out the vagina and mom's vagina has a microbiome
but what's fascinating is that late in the third trimester of pregnancy the vaginal microbiome
actually undergoes changes and prepares for delivery of the baby amazing and we see the
arrival of microbes i mean this is just is almost science fiction, but it's
real. You see changes where there are certain microbes that you would be more likely to
describe as being in the gut microbiome than in the vaginal microbiome. And they start showing up
basically as a welcoming party. The child passes through and this is like nature's supercharged probiotic.
Welcome to the world. Our first gift is a new microbiome. Here's your new suit.
And so then the child is born. And so I'm a young dad and we're expecting a new baby in just a few
weeks. And one of the things that people will frequently do
is skin on skin between the baby and the parent and there's actually a sharing of microbes that's
taking place immediately by that skin on skin contact so we are introducing this baby to a
new microbial world it's not a sterile world it's a microbial world in which we exist. And now the child will start to grow and develop his or her own microbiome. And one
of the things that really actually changes this is whether or not the child is breastfed.
And it turns out when we think about evolution, breast milk is evolved by nature to be the perfect food for infants.
And, you know, I do feel compelled to say this real quick, that one of the most stressful
things that I've ever dealt with in my entire life, despite all the years of medical training
and sick people, was actually when our daughter was born and she was struggling to breastfeed.
And I fully recognize that it's not something that's possible for everyone. was actually when our daughter was born and she was struggling to breastfeed.
And I fully recognize that it's not something that's possible for everyone.
There may be milk banks that are available to individuals if that's something that they want to look into if they struggle with this. But I also want people to know that it's not required
to have a healthy child to breastfeed your child, but it can contribute to a healthy child.
Well, I think that's really important because as a father with two children,
there's a lot of pressure about being a good parent and even more, I think, about being a
good mother. And this is yet another thing where you can feel that you fail. So I think that's very
important. People feel very guilty, right? They feel very guilty. But so Jonathan, back to the
breast milk, what's fascinating and like, I mean, honestly, mind bending is
that what they have discovered very recently in the last few years in breast milk are these
chains of sugars that they describe as human milk oligosaccharides.
And these human milk oligosaccharides, there's over 200 varieties of them.
Yet none of them have any direct nutritional value for the child
so what are they doing there and the answer is that human milk oligosaccharides are prebiotics
they are food for the baby's developing gut microbiome. We, mom, evolved 200 varieties of fiber
to help to fuel the developing microbiome in this newborn child.
Which is mad, isn't it?
And I heard a talk on this about four or so years ago,
and particularly about one of these strains, right, which is B.
Infantis, which is supposed to be sort of optimized, right,
for the particular fiber that is in mother's breast milk. And I got so convinced about this
that I convinced my wife that we had to give this to our now two-year-old. So like yet more pressure
to layer on top of what is, as we just said, a really tough time, right, in the first few
months. But I have no control tests, so I don't know whether, in fact, it was a good idea, whether it made a positive impact or not. Although I think
there is some really interesting sort of randomized control trials around this, right, Will?
Yeah, so we can talk about some of the data that surrounds breastfeeding versus bottle feeding.
One of the trends that's taking place in the formula space is actually to introduce fiber
into the formula. Now, to introduce fiber into the formula.
Now, again, fiber has no nutritional value to the child directly, but fiber is fuel for the
microbiome. The difference is that adding some inulin, for example, that's one type of fiber,
and that's not the same as 200 plus varieties of human milk oligosaccharides. And so that's
where nature is just so powerfully intelligent in recognizing what our individual needs are. That's galvanized through
human evolution, microbial co-evolution. So anyway, so the child is breastfed. It enhances
specific species of microbes, particularly the bifidobacterium that you were mentioning, Jonathan. And this child starts to mature,
their microbiome is developing, and then it explodes around six months of age when the child starts to introduce solid food. Again, you are feeding the species within the microbiome,
but the other thing that you're doing is you are introducing microbes. And so the child starts to really take
off in terms of the variety of species within their microbiome. And this process accelerates
to where by the time a child is two to three years of age, they're a little one,
they're physically small, but their gut microbiome is very big, just as big as us adults.
And so it really brings forward the importance of this, of nurturing during this critical period
of time from birth up to age two to three, where these are the formative years for the microbiome.
Most of our adult microbiome is going to be determined during this time.
And we want to protect it. And so going back to the data that you were asking about, Jonathan,
we have very interesting research studies that show a consistent pattern where if a child is
born by cesarean section, and by the way, both of my children have been born by cesarean section.
You can have healthy kids who are born by cesarean section. But if children have been born by cesarean section. You can have healthy
kids who are born by cesarean section, but if a child is born by cesarean section,
bottle fed or exposed to antibiotics during these formative years, these first two years,
we end up seeing the same downstream pattern later on in life, which is increased likelihood of metabolic
diseases that includes obesity and type 2 diabetes, and increased risk of immune-mediated issues
that include, for example, asthma or food allergies, or even some autoimmune diseases
such as celiac disease.
So all of that can sound a bit depressing.
And I always think one of the things about this podcast and Zoe is this idea that actually you can take a lot more control than maybe you think otherwise,
that a lot of this is alterable.
So let's say that's happened in your own previous life as a child or indeed with your children.
What can you do to help improve your gut health,
the health of your microbiome? I think it's a great place maybe to focus on towards the end
of this really interesting chat. Yeah. So the beauty of it is this,
that your gut microbiome, no matter what you have done and what you've been through,
your gut microbiome forgives you and wants to have a good, healthy relationship with you.
But it's important to see and understand
that ultimately our gut microbiome ends up being this image that reflects our environment.
An environment I'm using in a very broad sense in that it includes your nutrition. So the, you know, three pounds, the, you know, one and a third
kilos of food that you consume on a daily basis are perhaps the most important thing in terms of
shaping your microbiome. And when you change what you eat in less than 24 hours, you will see
changes in your gut microbiome. That's how malleable it is.
But it also includes, you know, whether or not you're getting a good night's rest,
exercise, moving your body, spending time outdoors. What is the environment in your home?
Do you have pets? And then I think that there's one thing that I would want to bring forward because, you know,
let me be the first to say that as an author of a nutrition book, it's way too easy for me to fixate on nutrition for an entire hour and not actually comment on one of the most important parts,
which is our relationships that we have. And part of that is the relationships with others.
So real quick, Jonathan, this is new research that actually I find to be very exciting,
where they have shown that we share microbes with our spouse.
And actually we share more microbes with our spouse than we do with our siblings.
Even though we are in the same family and we share genetics, we actually have more microbes
in common with our spouse. And again, I'm thinking my wife would say that given the
way that I clean up after dinner, that's not surprising, but is that the explanation or
where does this come from? Well, one of the things they did in this study is they actually controlled for the food.
Okay.
And they actually discovered that even after controlling for food,
that there was this connection between your partner that you cohabitate with.
So it's not just my mess is what you're saying.
It's not just your mess.
You're off the hook, man.
Okay.
Well, I don't think so, but thank you.
Well, at least for this friendly uh
safe place that we have here during the zoe podcast and then you have to go back to real life
go downstairs but in this study jonathan what was fascinating is that they discovered that
partners who feel very emotionally connected to one another, share more microbes together than partners who, for example, feel
distant and separated.
And we are social creatures.
Oh, that's amazing.
So there might be some new relationship tests.
I love the idea of this, where we can both get our microbiome sequenced and you can figure
out how well the relationship is going with like an external
scientific test. It's going to completely blow the minds of the marriage relationship business.
Now that would be interesting and perhaps quite controversial, but that would be an interesting
thing for us to do. Well, and there's a number of ways that you can look at this. One is that
we share microbes and we don't even realize that many of the things that we just accept as normal human behavior is actually us expressing a connection with one
another through microbes.
They've researched kissing and we share a hundred million microbes with a good kiss.
If I see you in London, Jonathan, I'm either going to shake your hands or give you a big
high five.
And either way, we are sharing microbes when we do that. Right. And so, but the other thing is
that we are social creatures. And if you want to tear a person apart, you isolate them. But if you
want to bring out the best in a human being, then you surround them with others who love them and
support them and make that clear.
And so when we feel loved and supported, we are our best versions of ourselves.
So what I wanted to bring forward in sort of these last moments is that, yes, it is our
relationships with others. But the other thing too, that's important, like very important,
is the relationship that we have with ourself.
We have to love ourselves. And if there are things that are unsettled, that are bothering us,
there's actually physiologic ways. This is not woo-woo. This is actually science.
There are physiologic ways in which during times of stress, our pituitary glands will release a hormone called CRH, corticotropin releasing hormone.
And that will set off a cascade of stress response that if you follow it down to the gut microbiome, you will discover that the gut microbiome becomes disturbed. We use the word
dysbiosis. And this is why in times of stress stress many of us will manifest digestive symptoms like diarrhea
or abdominal cramping or bloating the gut is connected to our mood and if you have something
that is unsettled like we could use the word trauma and that could be big trauma but it could
also just be something that's bothering you or a stressful job situation or something going on at home or someone who's sick.
And those things can unfortunately activate this stress response and be the thing that's
holding us back.
And the reason that I wanted to bring that up real quick is that I think it's important
because there are people who exist.
I've seen these people so many times. They are often in front of me as patients where they do everything right.
They eat right. They sleep, they exercise, and they're not better. And the reason why is because
the thing that's holding them back is that there is something that is unsettled and it needs to
be addressed.
So I thought it'd be important to bring that in
as part of the discussion.
I think that's brilliant.
I think just before we wrap,
I think we always love to try and provide
sort of as much actionable advice as possible.
So clearly we'll talk a lot more on food in many podcasts,
but if I said, well, you know,
if somebody is listening to this,
they're really convinced that their gut microbiome matters to them. And they're saying, you know,
can you give me like three tips around food? Because you talked about some other things.
So sort of three tips around something that we can do around food that might be able to
be positive for my gut health? Absolutely. So if I'm afforded three opportunities,
three tips, the first thing that I would do is to say that we need to increase the consumption of plant food in our diet. Now, this is not necessarily applicable to every single person. You might be 90% plant-based and that is a radically different than the UK, the average person is only 10%
plant-based. And that means we have a lot of room to increase our plant food consumption because
these are the foods that our microbes love to eat. The second rule from a dietary perspective,
and this applies to everyone, no matter how healthy your diet is, is that we need more
variety in our diet. The food system actually doesn't want this to happen.
75% of the calories that come from plants
come from only three plants, wheat, soy, and corn.
So if it's going to happen,
if we're going to eat more variety of plants,
it has to come from within.
We have to be the ones to initiate this despite the system.
And so I encourage everyone to focus, make this a focus with your food, with every meal,
eat a wider variety of plants.
And the third thing is that we're in an exciting time because science is validating things
that we've believed to be true, yet didn't yet have the research studies to back it up
until recently. And just in the last year, new science from Christopher Gardner, who's one of my partners
on the Zoe Scientific Advisory Board, he's at Stanford University.
And in collaboration with Justin and Erica Sonnenberg, also at Stanford University, they
looked at an intervention where people consumed more fermented food.
And in just 10 weeks of increasing their fermented food consumption,
they were able to increase the diversity within their gut microbiome and reduce measures of inflammation.
That's powerful.
That's amazing, isn't it?
Well, thank you very much.
You know, this was an introduction.
I am sure we're going to come back to many of these topics, given that gut health is one of the things we're passionate
about on this podcast. But I'd like to just try and summarize what we've covered today.
So we set off by saying, what is the microbiome? And the answer is, particularly the gut microbiome
is these trillions of mainly bacteria inside our gut. And then we said, can it be an organ? And I think your answer
was, from your perspective, it is an organ. Then you talked about a number of studies that
really shows, I guess, sort of real scientific proof for why the microbiome works, of which
you gave this really amazing one, which I've heard before, where they took the microbiome from two
twins, one of whom was overweight
and the other not, and you could actually carry that over to mice, even though they
were eating exactly the same food.
And so it really shows this real causal impact.
And then we talked a little bit about sort of how the microbiome develops from birth.
I think you share this fascinating information that maybe, you know, as a baby, we're not
even completely sterile inside the womb,
despite being sort of wrapped up in this protected state. But certainly from the point that your
mother's waters break, then suddenly you're getting exposed to all of these bacteria from
your mother, which are maybe being specially curated for you. And then there's many other
things beyond food, which I think is particularly interesting because we tend to really fixate a lot
on food. You talked about sleep, you talked about exercise, and then you talked about social
interactions and some really interesting new research that apparently will tell me how close
I am to my spouse based upon how many bacteria we share. So I'll go and discuss that tonight
and talked a lot about stress also and the way that it might be having a very negative
impact in general on your life
and also here. And then finally, we wrapped up with three really simple food tips that you could
take away. And I think you said, firstly, increase the amount that's coming from plants. Secondly,
eat more variety in your diet, so more different plants. And the third thing is eat more fermented
foods. And there is now some studies coming along
suggesting that that can really, really have an impact. Yeah. And that's a very impressive
summary of this entire podcast and listening through it, it just makes it very clear that
we've covered a lot of very important ground, but you know, I hope that what the listeners
receive from this is that they're convinced that we, nature has decided that we
are the best version of ourselves as super organisms when we have a healthy relationship
with our gut microbiome. And we really knew nothing about this relationship until very recently.
But now we are finally empowered with a new knowledge and new science that is transforming our ability
to nurture that relationship and bring out the best in all of us.
And that's really exciting.
Super exciting.
Thank you so much, Will.
Really enjoyed that.
Thank you, Jonathan.
Thank you to my friend, Dr. Will Bulsiewicz for joining me on Zoe Science and Nutrition
today.
We hope you enjoyed today's episode if you did
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finally if this episode left you with any questions,
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and we will try to answer them in a future episode.
As always, I'm your host, Jonathan Wolfe.
Zoe Science and Nutrition is produced by Fascinate Productions
with support from Sharon Fedder and Megan McPherson here at Zoe.
See you next time.