DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igad104.1963 ISSN: 2399-5300

ASSOCIATIONS BETWEEN WALKING SPEED AND GUT MICROBIOME DIVERSITY IN OLDER MEN FROM THE MROS STUDY

Samaneh Farsijani, Jane Cauley, Peggy Cawthon, Lisa Langsetmo, Eric Orwoll, Anne Newman, Deborah Kado
  • Life-span and Life-course Studies
  • Health Professions (miscellaneous)
  • Health (social science)

Abstract

While gut dysbiosis has been linked to frailty in aging, its association with early mobility impairments is unclear. Here, our primary goal was to determine the cross-sectional associations between walking speed and gut microbiome in 740 older men (84±4y) from MrOS with available stool samples and 400m walking speed measured in 2014–16. We also analyzed the retrospective longitudinal associations between changes in 6-meter walking speed (from 2005-06 to 2014-16) and gut microbiome composition among participants with available data (702/740). The gut microbiome composition was determined by 16S sequencing (DADA2 and SILVA). We examined diversity, taxa abundance (by ANCOM-BC), and performed network analysis (by NetCoMi) to uncover microbial communities interactions by walking speed levels. Higher walking speed (m/s) was associated with greater microbiome Shannon α-diversity (R=0.11; P=0.004). Decline in walking speed was associated with lower Shannon α-diversity (R=0.07; P=0.054). Faster walking speed and less decline in walking speed were associated with higher abundance of genus-level bacteria that produce short-chain fatty acids, and possess anti-inflammatory properties, including Paraprevotella, Fusicatenibacter, and Alistipes, adjusting for age, race, site, education, health, marital status, weight, height, physical activity, batch, medications, energy, and fiber intake (P< 0.05). The gut microbiome networks of participants in the first vs. last quartile of walking speed (≤0.9 vs. ≥1.2 m/s) exhibited distinct characteristics, including different cluster numbers, hubs, and centrality measures (P< 0.05). Faster walking speed and its less decline were associated with higher gut microbiome diversity, suggesting potential role of microbiome in preserving mobility in aging.

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