DOI: 10.1126/science.1229000 ISSN:

Gut Microbiomes of Malawian Twin Pairs Discordant for Kwashiorkor

Michelle I. Smith, Tanya Yatsunenko, Mark J. Manary, Indi Trehan, Rajhab Mkakosya, Jiye Cheng, Andrew L. Kau, Stephen S. Rich, Patrick Concannon, Josyf C. Mychaleckyj, Jie Liu, Eric Houpt, Jia V. Li, Elaine Holmes, Jeremy Nicholson, Dan Knights, Luke K. Ursell, Rob Knight, Jeffrey I. Gordon
  • Multidisciplinary

Not Just Wasting

Malnutrition is well known in Malawi, including a severe form—kwashiorkor—in which children do not simply waste away, they also suffer edema, liver damage, skin ulceration, and anorexia. Smith et al. (p. 548 ; see the Perspective by Relman ) investigated the microbiota of pairs of twins in Malawian villages and found notable differences in the composition of the gut microbiota in children with kwashiorkor. In these children, a bacterial species related to Desulfovibrio , which has been associated with bowel disease and inflammation, was noticeable. When the fecal flora from either the healthy or the sick twin was transplanted into groups of germ-free mice, the mice that received the kwashiorkor sample started to lose weight, like their human counterpart.

More from our Archive