Cooking shapes the structure and function of the gut microbiome.
Rachel N CarmodyJordan E BisanzBenjamin P BowenCorinne F MauriceSvetlana LyalinaKatherine B LouieDaniel G C TreenKatia S ChadaidehVayu Maini RekdalElizabeth N BessPeter SpanogiannopoulosQi Yan AngKylynda C BauerThomas W BalonKatherine S PollardTrent R NorthenPeter J TurnbaughPublished in: Nature microbiology (2019)
Diet is a critical determinant of variation in gut microbial structure and function, outweighing even host genetics1-3. Numerous microbiome studies have compared diets with divergent ingredients1-5, but the everyday practice of cooking remains understudied. Here, we show that a plant diet served raw versus cooked reshapes the murine gut microbiome, with effects attributable to improvements in starch digestibility and degradation of plant-derived compounds. Shifts in the gut microbiota modulated host energy status, applied across multiple starch-rich plants, and were detectable in humans. Thus, diet-driven host-microbial interactions depend on the food as well as its form. Because cooking is human-specific, ubiquitous and ancient6,7, our results prompt the hypothesis that humans and our microbiomes co-evolved under unique cooking-related pressures.