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Full Professor of the Spanish Research Council (CSIC)
Head of the Research Unit «Microbiome Innovation
in Nutrition & Health » at IATA-CSIC, Valencia, Spain
Gut microbiome variations are linked to dietary habits and obesity risk in humans. Translational studies from humans to models show that the microbiota associated with obesity contributes to the hallmarks of metabolic disease. These studies demonstrate that the gut microbiome influences obesity through body-brain interactions originating in the gut that regulate immune and neuroendocrine pathways controlling energy balance. In my presentation, I will discuss how different intestinal bacterial strains associated with a metabolically healthy phenotype in humans and their metabolic products may help combat obesity by restoring endocrine or immune signaling from the gut to the brain and peripheral tissues. While some beneficial bacterial strains improve GLP-1 production and signaling via endocrine or paracrine routes, thereby exerting anti-diabetic effects, others enhance glucose metabolism and reduce body weight by decreasing inflammation through actions on innate or adaptive immunity. Although evidence from human intervention trials is still much needed, this translational research is deepening our understanding of the pathophysiology of metabolic disease and offers hope for developing microbiome-informed interventions to combat the complications of
obesity more efficiently.
Lecture series coordinated by the Luxembourg Institute of Health, the University of Luxembourg, and the Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology, and organized within the framework of the MICRO-PATH Doctoral Training Unit coordinated by the University of Luxembourg and the Luxembourg Institute of Health.
House of BioHealth
Room: Big conference room at ground floor
29, rue Henri Koch,
L-4366 Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg
LECTURE: 10:30 – 12:00
MEET & GREAT: 12:30 – 14:00
*Please note that registration is mandatory for meeting after presentation by sending an email to michelle.roderes@lih.lu

Supported by the Luxembourg National Research Fund
RESCOM Lecture series (19470154)
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