Gut bacteria from active mice produce metabolites that prevent muscle loss
Burke BI, Valentino TR, Ismaeel A, El-Amouri SS, Goh J
Microbiome
Pipecolic acid, one of the two protective compounds identified here, is the same molecule your tomatoes and beans synthesize after a local infection to prime the entire plant for defense, so its biology runs across kingdoms in ways that keep turning up in unexpected places.
Exercise changes the mix of bacteria living in the gut, and those bacteria release chemical compounds that travel to muscles and help keep them from shrinking during inactivity. Researchers confirmed this by transferring gut contents between mice and then testing two of those compounds as oral supplements. One of them, pipecolic acid, is also produced by plants as a whole-body alarm signal after disease strikes, making it a compound with a long history in biology well before this mammalian context.
Key Findings
Gut content transfers from exercise-trained donor mice reduced hindlimb muscle atrophy in immobilized sedentary recipients compared with sedentary donors
Oral administration of pipecolic acid and succinate attenuated muscle atrophy and preserved muscle function in exercise-naive mice
Untargeted metabolomics confirmed both metabolites were enriched in cecal contents, serum, and muscle tissue consistent with microbial origin rather than host synthesis
chevron_right Technical Summary
Gut bacteria from exercise-trained mice produce metabolites that protect muscles from wasting, even in mice that never exercised. Oral doses of two of those metabolites reduced muscle loss and preserved muscle function, positioning them as potential stand-ins for physical activity.
Abstract Preview
Original paper
Exercise-associated microbial metabolites prevent skeletal muscle atrophy in adult female mice.
We previously reported that skeletal muscle adaptation to regular exercise requires a healthy gut microbiome, contributing to growing evidence that some exercise benefits are mediated by microbiome...
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