Fat, fibre and cancer risk in African Americans and rural Africans

Stephen J. O’Keefe(University of Pittsburgh), Jia V. Li(Imperial College London), Leo Lahti(Wageningen University & Research), Junhai Ou(University of Pittsburgh), Franck Carbonero(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Khaled Mohammed(University of Pittsburgh), Joram M. Posma(Imperial College London), James Kinross(Imperial College London), Elaine Wahl(University of Pittsburgh), Elizabeth H. Ruder(University of Pittsburgh), Kishore Vipperla(University of Pittsburgh), Vasudevan G. Naidoo(University of KwaZulu-Natal), Lungile Mtshali(University of KwaZulu-Natal), Sebastian Tims(Wageningen University & Research), Philippe G. Puylaert(Wageningen University & Research), James P. DeLany(University of Pittsburgh), Alyssa M. Krasinskas(University of Pittsburgh), Ann C. Benefiel(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Hatem Kaseb(University of Pittsburgh), Keith Newton(University of KwaZulu-Natal), Jeremy K. Nicholson(Imperial College London), Willem M. de Vos(University of Helsinki), H. Rex Gaskins(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Erwin G. Zoetendal(Wageningen University & Research)
Nature Communications
April 28, 2015
Cited by 967Open Access
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Abstract

Rates of colon cancer are much higher in African Americans (65:100,000) than in rural South Africans (<5:100,000). The higher rates are associated with higher animal protein and fat, and lower fibre consumption, higher colonic secondary bile acids, lower colonic short-chain fatty acid quantities and higher mucosal proliferative biomarkers of cancer risk in otherwise healthy middle-aged volunteers. Here we investigate further the role of fat and fibre in this association. We performed 2-week food exchanges in subjects from the same populations, where African Americans were fed a high-fibre, low-fat African-style diet and rural Africans a high-fat, low-fibre western-style diet, under close supervision. In comparison with their usual diets, the food changes resulted in remarkable reciprocal changes in mucosal biomarkers of cancer risk and in aspects of the microbiota and metabolome known to affect cancer risk, best illustrated by increased saccharolytic fermentation and butyrogenesis, and suppressed secondary bile acid synthesis in the African Americans. African Americans have much higher colon cancer rates than rural South Africans, which is associated with dietary and metabolic differences. Here, O’Keefe et al.show that switching quantities of fat and fibre leads to reciprocal changes in gut microbiota, metabolites and cancer biomarkers.


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