Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Direct supplementation with Urolithin A overcomes limitations of dietary exposure and gut microbiome variability in healthy adults to achieve consistent levels across the population

Anurag Singh, Davide D’Amico, Pénélope A. Andreux, Gillian DunnGalvin, Timo Kern, William Blanco-Bose, Johan Auwerx, Patrick Aebischer, Chris Rinsch

European Journal of Clinical Nutrition · 2021 · ▲ 111 citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Urolithin A (UA) is produced by gut microflora from foods rich in ellagitannins. UA has been shown to improve mitochondrial health preclinically and in humans. Not everyone has a microbiome capable of producing UA, making supplementation with UA an appealing strategy. OBJECTIVE: This is the first detailed investigation of the prevalence of UA producers in a healthy population and the ability of direct UA supplementation to overcome both microbiome and dietary variability. Dietary intake of a glass of pomegranate juice (PJ) was used to assess UA producer status (n = 100 participants) and to characterize differences in gut microbiome between UA producers from non-producers. METHODS: Subjects were randomized (1:1) to either PJ or a food product containing UA (500 mg). Prevalence of UA producers and non-producers were determined in the PJ group. Diet questionnaires and fecal samples were collected to compare differences between UA producers and non-producers along with plasma samples at different time points to assess levels of UA and its conjugates between the interventions. RESULTS: Only 12% of subjects had detectable levels of UA at baseline. Following PJ intake ~40% of the subjects converted significantly the precursor compounds into UA. UA producers were distinguished by a significantly higher gut microbiome diversity and ratio of Firmicutes to Bacteroides. Direct supplementation with UA significantly increased plasma levels and provided a >6-fold exposure to UA vs. PJ (p < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: Differences in gut microbiome and diet that dictate natural exposure to UA can be overcome via direct dietary UA supplementation.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1038/s41430-021-00950-1
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-24 MST

Cite this

APA
Singh, A., D’Amico, D., Andreux, P.A., DunnGalvin, G., Kern, T., Blanco-Bose, W., Auwerx, J., Aebischer, P., &amp; Rinsch, C. (2021). Direct supplementation with Urolithin A overcomes limitations of dietary exposure and gut microbiome variability in healthy adults to achieve consistent levels across the population. <em>European Journal of Clinical Nutrition</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41430-021-00950-1
Vancouver
Singh A, D’Amico D, Andreux PA, DunnGalvin G, Kern T, Blanco-Bose W, et al. Direct supplementation with Urolithin A overcomes limitations of dietary exposure and gut microbiome variability in healthy adults to achieve consistent levels across the population. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 2021. doi:10.1038/s41430-021-00950-1.
BibTeX
@article{anurag2021Direct, title = {Direct supplementation with Urolithin A overcomes limitations of dietary exposure and gut microbiome variability in healthy adults to achieve consistent levels across the population}, author = {Anurag Singh and Davide D’Amico and Pénélope A. Andreux and Gillian DunnGalvin and Timo Kern and William Blanco-Bose and Johan Auwerx and Patrick Aebischer and Chris Rinsch}, journal = {European Journal of Clinical Nutrition}, year = {2021}, doi = {10.1038/s41430-021-00950-1}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings