ramoz 19 hours ago

Did quick research on how to support the bacteria growth

> Dietary modifications that emphasize high-fiber and prebiotic foods and dietary supplements may support the healthy growth of Roseburia [1]

> As stated above, a Mediterranean diet is associated with increased Roseburia growth. This diet emphasizes primarily plant-based foods: whole fruits and vegetables, whole grains, legumes, nuts and seeds, olive oil, and fatty fish. The high fiber and resistant starch content of these foods may fuel Roseburia and the other beneficial flora of the human microbiome [1]

> Polyphenols are plant compounds abundant in fruits, vegetables, tea, and coffee. Emerging research indicates that polyphenols can enhance Roseburia abundance indirectly by inhibiting harmful bacteria and fostering beneficial ones. [2]

[1] https://www.rupahealth.com/post/roseburia-spp-101

[2] https://www.innerbuddies.com/pages/gut-microbiome-101/gut-ba...

  • OfirMarom 19 hours ago

    Thanks for the dietary info! Helps make it concrete.

  • underlipton 17 hours ago

    tl;dr They don't know.

    I wish scientists would be more open about how little they understand digestion and nutrition, particularly on an individual level. Advice gets presented as an if-then, when it's not.

    • kbenson 9 hours ago

      If you have a complaint against "scientists" as hsme homogenous group, I think I'm going to have to ask you to explain how these particular scientists did not do that, and why you would think this is a problem of scientists (a label for a largelt disparate group not connected through any specific communication or hierarchy and mostly in output) in general?

    • drecked 4 hours ago

      Nutrition researchers know a lot about diet. Or at least what constitutes a good diet.

      The reason you think “they don’t know” is a media ecosystem that hypes weak minor contrary results that usually disappear in further research and an entrenched trillion dollar food industry that spreads misinformation to get you to continue eating the foods they sell that have the highest markups, such as processed foods, meat and dairy.

culi 19 hours ago

It works by converting fibers into butyrate. You should maintain a high fiber diet to promote Roseburia in your gut

  • adrian_b 19 hours ago

    It is known that the bacteria that produce high amount of butyrate are beneficial, e.g. by decreasing the risk of colon cancer, but this does not seem sufficient to explain the increase in muscle strength that seems to be caused by this species alone.

    The study has first found in humans a correlation between muscle strength and the presence of this bacterium. Then they have attempted to determine whether this correlation is due to a causal relationship by killing the gut bacteria in mice, then feeding them with this kind of human gut bacteria. The result was an increased muscle strength, which seems to confirm causality.

    How the bacteria increase muscle strength remains unknown. I think that a possible explanation may be that this bacterium produces some substance that mimics a human hormone, e.g. a steroid, in which case it would be a kind of natural doping.

    • sandworm101 19 hours ago

      Natural or otherwise, one must wonder if there are similar downsides.

  • DiscourseFan 19 hours ago

    I've always eaten a ton of fiber, to the point where if I stop I get constipated, and I've always put on muscle fairly easily.

  • b65e8bee43c2ed0 19 hours ago

    the fiber will promote all bacteria in your gut, not just this particular strain.

    • blargey 17 hours ago

      All fiber-consuming gut bacteria, yes - but that's basically synonymous with "good"/beneficial gut bacteria, so it's good advice even if it doesn't give people the massive gainz they might have been hoping for.

  • moffkalast 18 hours ago

    You know it would be funny if at least once the finding would be "you should eat more hamburgers" or something.

    • HK-NC 16 hours ago

      A home made hamburger can be incredibly healthy.

      • array_key_first 12 hours ago

        It can be, but it's often not. The thing that makes hamburgers harmful isn't really the "chemicals" or processing or whatever, it's the fact that it's red meat with high amounts of saturated fat.

        You would have to use low fat beef, and ideally not beef but turkey.

        I think some people think that burgers, fries, steak, and milkshakes are bad for you because they're fast food or restaurant food. No... no that stuff is just bad for you. You'll get a heart attack if you make it at home, too. Just eat it in moderation and eat more vegetables.

        • culi 9 hours ago

          IMHO it's the restaurant. For a variety of reasons but here's just one example of a mechanic:

          > Repeatedly heated cooking oils (RCO) can generate varieties of compounds, including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), some of which have been reported as carcinogenic. RCO is one of the commonly consumed cooking and frying medium. These RCO consumption and inhalation of cooking fumes can pose a serious health hazard.

          https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28925728/

          Nutrition is complicated and rules of thumb can be really useful even if they sometimes over simplify things. One good rule that has had a ton of research interest into it in the past decade or so is ultra-processed foods. Here's a BMJ review

          > Greater exposure to ultra-processed food was associated with a higher risk of adverse health outcomes, especially cardiometabolic, common mental disorder, and mortality outcomes. These findings provide a rationale to develop and evaluate the effectiveness of using population based and public health measures to target and reduce dietary exposure to ultra-processed foods for improved human health. They also inform and provide support for urgent mechanistic research.

          https://www.bmj.com/content/384/bmj-2023-077310

      • moffkalast 6 hours ago

        Comparatively? Sure. In absolute terms though, it's always gonna be bread and red meat.

    • Jensson 11 hours ago

      If you go to Somalia I'd bet most of those would be healthier if they started eating more hamburgers, so its context dependent.

  • functional_dev 8 hours ago

    So.. eat more fiber and your gut bacteria will produce butyrate. And that helps muscles.

ben8bit 19 hours ago

Eat some apples and add 10lb to your bench. Nice!

soopypoos 18 hours ago

Neisseria gonorrhoeae doesn't even have muscles but it can pull 100,000x its own weight

sublinear 19 hours ago

> This opens up the possibility that the bacterium under investigation could be used as a probiotic to help preserve muscle strength during aging

Maybe, but it's really hard to control for other variables here. They don't know what's causing this bacteria to diminish over time in older adults in the first place.

It could totally just be dietary habits getting worse over time as people let themselves go. Regardless of age, most people already don't eat enough protein and when they do they might not be getting "complete" proteins either (missing amino acids is common with plant-based foods).

  • fylo 19 hours ago

    For me personally, as I've gotten older I have continued to eat better and more consistently than I ever did earlier in life. I think the long term study of your own life tends to show you that diet is one of, if not the, primary factor in short and long term health and well being.

  • DennisP 16 hours ago

    That's why they followed up with an actual experiment with mice, where they found that just adding the bacteria made them stronger.

    Of course we won't know for sure before doing human experiments, but it'd be an odd coincidence if we saw the correlation in humans and causation in mice, but there was no causation in humans.

g-b-r 18 hours ago

Will people really go after Tom Brady's stuff now? xD

shevy-java 19 hours ago

So Homer Simpson was right in the end.

Beer is basically fermented sugar (well, glucose converted to ethanol by yeast, for the most part; though its maltose first, yeast, bacteria etc... prefer glucose and maltose is a disaccharide of glucose: Maltose).

  • mikrl 19 hours ago

    Pretty sure Duff was a heavily filtered macro beer.

    Not saying engineered beer is necessarily bad- Sapporo and Asahi never disappoint- but I imagine you would want to stick to unfiltered and unpasteurized to retain some of the more… alive compounds.

  • joshuahaglund 19 hours ago

    No beer has nothing to do with Roseburia genus bacteria

FurstFly 19 hours ago

My gym bros gonna be so shocked lol

rendall 19 hours ago

...in mice. :/

  • Aboutplants 19 hours ago

    Maybe we need to flip it and start testing new mouse drugs on Humans?

    • RobRivera 19 hours ago

      We need deeper research into mouse bites as medicine.

      • wpm 19 hours ago

        More mouse bites!

  • stefs 19 hours ago

    As always. But it's a first step.

  • jb1991 19 hours ago

    The reflex “in mice” meme has been annoying for quite some time.

  • adrian_b 19 hours ago

    It is not that simple.

    They have found first a correlation between the presence of this species of bacteria and muscle strength in humans.

    Then they have made an attempt to determine whether this correlation reflects a causal relationship.

    So they have fed mice previously treated with antibiotics, to remove their own gut bacteria, with this kind of bacteria extracted from humans.

    They have indeed seen an increase in muscular strength at the mice that have received the human bacteria, which seems to confirm causality between the presence of this bacterium and muscle strength.

    While they have also determined the biochemical changes in muscles that have caused increased strength, the mechanism of how the bacteria have influenced that remains a mystery. Perhaps this bacterium produces some substance that mimics a human hormone, e.g. a steroid.

    Paywalled research article: https://gut.bmj.com/content/early/2026/03/03/gutjnl-2025-336...

    • rendall 18 hours ago

      So, literally, "Bacteria found in the human intestine capable of improving muscle strength in mice" then.

      • SV_BubbleTime 18 hours ago

        If we wanted to we could either make super mice. Or have a great head start on really unethical but impressive human health progress… that just comes from all the horrible human testing that would be necessary.

blitzar 17 hours ago

Gym bros are going to be eating their own faeces for the gainz.

grg0 19 hours ago

This is why I tell my gym bros that they should quit all that Celsius garbage and stick to the basics. You should measure your gut health by the quality of your feces (consistency, texture, colour, shape), and then your muscles and rest of your body will thank you. This research is evidence of that. The science is still catching up.

  • stefs 19 hours ago

    Celsius?

    • grg0 19 hours ago

      Corrected, thank you.

  • acessoproibido 19 hours ago

    What do you mean by celcius garbage?

    Fun fact: in Germany most toilets have a built in 'inspection plate' so you can look at your shit before you flush it. In other places I often found it hard to judge the quality because you can't even see it well or it gets flushed instantly

    • grg0 19 hours ago

      I meant Celsius, a popular energy drink in the US, but more generally that and the processed foods people take in for some supposed performance gains.

      • SV_BubbleTime 18 hours ago

        It’s gross sugar water. I accidentally bought some once and years later I found out people are intentionally drinking it.

        • simulator5g 16 hours ago

          It's not sugar, they use synthetic sweeteners. I started getting gout symptoms after picking up a Celsius habit, then quit that without making any other changes, and the symptoms went away.

          • SV_BubbleTime 14 hours ago

            You’re right. I misplaced sweet for sugar.

            Yes. Overly sweetened with chemicals.

    • unsupp0rted 19 hours ago

      I always wondered if the "inspection plate" was really for inspection or some side-effect of plumbing or something

      • p1anecrazy 19 hours ago

        One explanation I heard is “helps save water when flushing”

      • soopypoos 19 hours ago

        it also helps avoid Neptune's kiss

    • b112 19 hours ago

      It's literally in the bowl you were just sitting in. I'm not sure where the inspection plate goes. Is this an AI saying this? Is the rest of the thread AIs? Is this all made up. What's happening!?

      I thought learning about bidets was a new experience, now inspection plates?!

      I thought I understood this part of my life.

      scared and confused

      • kadoban 18 hours ago

        It's just different shapes of toilets. There's a part without water directly under you, and then when you flush it's flooded.

      • rokkamokka 18 hours ago

        Just do a quick search for German toilet and you'll see.

      • grg0 17 hours ago

        There are no AIs here, only gains.

  • tvshtr 19 hours ago

    "Bro, take a look at my poop"

  • notesinthefield 19 hours ago

    It is so wonderful to hear someone else say this. My spouse and friends think In so weird for emphasizing optimizing your diet for things that digest well, macro dense and give you good shits. I am quietly pleased when my own looks completely normal and uninteresting.

rramadass 19 hours ago

Perhaps there is also a direct correlation between this microbiome and longevity in the so-called "blue zones" of the world like Okinawa, Sardinia etc.

We are what we eat.

  • tvshtr 19 hours ago

    Some of the blue zones were disproven, due to falsified documentation or lack of it.

  • patmorgan23 19 hours ago

    IIRC there are several of the "Blue Zones" where just bad government records. (People who had incorrect birth dates, or had already died and the government just didn't know about it)

    • SV_BubbleTime 18 hours ago

      Jose DeSanquin Demarco of Bolivia is now the world’s oldest man at 117, he attributes his health to 10 hours daily in the sun and fields farming quinoa.

      Photographed here, Jose’s 90 year old wife holds their newborn twins.

  • jareklupinski 19 hours ago

    > We are what we eat.

    putting together a theory on how bacteria organized multicellular life to exploit our macro-movements and proliferate between damp spots

    • rramadass 11 hours ago

      Do you mean you work in this domain and are working on the above theory?

      • jareklupinski 3 hours ago

        my only credential is a bio-eng degree, but i read a lot and hope to put together a novel or something to get ppl thinking about it, until we can find a way to test the hypothesis

emanuele-em 18 hours ago

Every few months there's a new study showing gut bacteria control yet another thing we thought was "us." Mood, cognition, immune response, and now muscle strength. Starting to wonder what's even left.

  • dd8601fn 18 hours ago

    And yet, still no serious fixes for any of it that aren’t just jabronis pitching overpriced and ineffective supplements.

    • wiml 15 hours ago

      Recommendation #1 is almost always "eat a healthy, varied diet high in vegetables, fiber, etc". Pretty f'in straightforward if you ask me.

      • array_key_first 12 hours ago

        Yes, I think some people are waiting for doctors to tell them that they can eat hamburgers and drink milkshakes and be healthy.

        Remember when Mom said to eat your vegetables? Turns out she was right.