World map of metabolism finds blood pressure clues

Sun Apr 20, 2008 7:14pm BST
 
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By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Researchers creating a map of human metabolism around the world have found compounds in urine that point to some surprising differences affecting blood pressure, based not on genes but on what people eat and their gut bacteria.

They hope their findings, published in the journal Nature on Sunday, can help lead to the development of new drugs to fight high blood pressure or perhaps even non-drug therapy.

They analyzed urine samples from 4,630 people in the United States, Britain, Japan and China to find some surprising new links to blood pressure differences.

"On one end of the metabolic world we have got people in southern China and at the other end we have got people from Corpus Christi, Texas," said Jeremy Nicholson of Imperial College London, who led the study.

"And you can geographically map people according to their metabolic patterns," he added.

"Britain is the '51st state' as we are really in the middle of America. Our lifestyle and our diets and our ethnic mixes are quite similar in many ways to America."

The patterns do not seem to follow genetics, Nicholson said. "It has to do with their diet and lifestyle and also gut microorganisms," Nicholson said.

Bacteria in the intestines and colon help digest and break down food and many recent studies have suggested that humans and their gut bacteria have a truly symbiotic relationship.  Continued...

 
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