Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Early-life gut microbial reconstitution withduring lactation mitigates high-fat diet-induced obesity in adult mice.
- Journal:
- Food & function
- Year:
- 2026
- Authors:
- Li, Zhongxin et al.
- Affiliation:
- School of Food Science and Engineering · China
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
Epidemiological and animal studies have suggested that early-life overfeeding (ELOF) triggers lasting metabolic dysfunction. However, the role of gut microbiota in this process remains largely unelucidated. Here, we established a mouse model of ELOF through reducing litter size and revealed that ELOF accelerated growth during lactation, induced obesity at weaning, and left a lasting obesity imprinting and gut microbiota dysbiosis. Notably, a detailed analysis of gut microbiota revealed that a pivotal differential species,, demonstrated significant depletion exclusively in weaned ELOF mice, with no analogous reduction observed in adult ELOF mice. Furthermore, while post-weaning microbiota reconstitution proved insufficient to reverse diet-induced obesity in adult ELOF mice, early supplementation withduring the lactation period substantially mitigated these programmed metabolic alterations. Our findings causally link ELOF, early-life gut microbial imbalance, and late-onset obesity in mice, and suggest that probiotic intervention during critical developmental periods may serve as an effective strategy to mitigate the obesity imprint in infants and young children.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41635285/