Potential long consequences from internal and external ecology: Loss of gut microbiota antifragility in children from an industrialized population compared with an indigenous rural lifestyle

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Abstract

Human health is strongly mediated by the gut microbiota ecosystem, which, in turn, depends not only on its state but also on its dynamics and how it responds to perturbations. Healthy microbiota ecosystems tend to be in criticality and antifragile dynamics corresponding to a maximum complexity configuration, which may be assessed with information and network theory analysis. Under this complex system perspective, we used a new analysis of published data to show that a children's population with an industrialized urban lifestyle from Mexico City exhibits informational and network characteristics similar to parasitized children from a rural indigenous population in the remote mountainous region of Guerrero, México. We propose then, that in this critical age for gut microbiota maturation, the industrialized urban lifestyle could be thought of as an external perturbation to the gut microbiota ecosystem, and we show that it produces a similar loss in criticality/antifragility as the one observed by internal perturbation due to parasitosis by the helminth A. lumbricoides. Finally, several general complexity-based guidelines to prevent or restore gut ecosystem antifragility are discussed.

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G-Santoyo, I., Ramírez-Carrillo, E., Sanchez, J. D., & López-Corona, O. (2023). Potential long consequences from internal and external ecology: Loss of gut microbiota antifragility in children from an industrialized population compared with an indigenous rural lifestyle. Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease, 18(2). https://doi.org/10.1017/S2040174423000144

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