"No Sugar" Foods with Maltodextrin Mess with Your Gut Microbiome - Effects are Significant and Could Explain Rise in IBD, Crohn's, Ulcerative Colitis & Co

No, sugar may not be extra-healthy, but there's accumulating evidence that it's alleged "no-sugar" replacement maltodextrin may be even worse.
I find it quite fitting how Nickerson et al. start their recent review of the potential ill effects of maltodextrin by pointing out that inflammatory bowel disease (IBD | e.g. ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD)) is among the increasingly prevalent "complex, chronic inflammatory states associated with altered dynamics between host anti-microbial defenses and commensal microbes" that's plague modern human health.

Scientists have long believed that the ever-increasing number of people suffering from IBD is a consequence of environmental priming or triggering of a genetically susceptible individual to initiate uncontrolled inflammation against commensal bacteria.
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In fact, researchers have meanwhile been able to link many IBD-associated genetic risk loci to interactions between the mucosal immune system and microbes (Jostins. 2012) - in conjunction with a certain disposition to develop IBD, the presence of certain dietary ingredients may thus be critical to the eventual disruption of the host-microbial dynamics in the gut with all its ill health consequences (Spooren. 2013). It is thus only logical that recent studies show that
"IBD patients have alterations in both composition and organization of the commensal microbiome, as well as enhanced mucosal permeability. Overall, the bacterial diversity of the IBD microbiome is reduced, with notable decreases in Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes (especially in specific Clostridium species) and increases in Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria (including Escherichia coli). Additionally, E. coli strains with enhanced virulence have been identified in ileal CD patients.8 These strains, termed adherent-invasive E. coli (AIEC), have enhanced adhesive properties and the ability to invade and replicate within epithelial cells and macrophages" (Nickerson. 2015).
According to the latest science, the IBD microbiome also has an altered metabolic activity, with decreases in butyrate-producing bacteria and increases in sulfate-reducing strains noted in multiple studies and leads to a decreases in mucosal barrier function ("leaky gut") that leads to bacterial colonization directly on the surface of the intestinal epithelium, increased bacterial translocation, and stimulation of the immune system.
Figure 1: MDX enhances AIEC biofilm formation and cellular adhesion and does thus contribute to a decrease in intestinal barrier function and an unwanted increase in bacterial translocation from the gut into cirulation (Nickerson. 2015)
In previous studies, Nickerson et al. have identified maltodextrin, an increasingly common food ingredient the industry loves, because you can (ab-)use tons of it in your products and still label them as "low sugar" foods, as a potent disruptor of the intestinal microbiome. One that impairs cellular anti-bacterial responses and suppresses intestinal anti-microbial defense mechanisms.
Figure 2: Concomitant increases in CD incidence and MDX in the American diet (Nickerson. 2015).
There is suspicious, but not conclusive evidence that increases in MDX intakes are fueling the Crohn's epidemic: Epidemiological evidence supports the hypothesis that our increased consumption of maltodextrin (MDX) could be one of the motors that drives the rapid increase in crohn's disease (CD; see Figure 2) irrespective of an increase in gluten exposure by its direct negative effect on the composition of our intestinal microbiome and the subsequent effects on gut health (or rather illness).
More specifically, the cellular exposure to MDX in vitro impaired anti-bacterial responses, as demonstrated by the increased viability of intracellular Salmonella in macrophages and epithelial cells cultured in MDX-supplemented media. Nickerson et al. attribute the increased bacterial viability by (1) a diminished respiratory burst mediated by the NADPH oxidase system, and (2) alterations in bacterial trafficking to a protective niche in enlarged Rab7+ vesicles.

In their latest review, Nickerson et al. do yet go beyond the effects of MDX as the sole motor of the increase in IBD, citing similar and synergistic effects of other dietary additives, such as emulsifying agents or thickeners, which have also been found to have profound detrimental effects on intestinal homeostasis.
"Examples of dietary emulsifiers include carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC), carrageenan, xanthan gum, and MDX, which are derived from natural products and are classified as GRAS. However, carrageenan can be used to induce bacterially-driven intestinal inflammation in rodents and is now under re-evaluation by the FDA. Likewise, in interleukin-10-deficient mice that are genetically predisposed to colitis, CMC consumption synergizes with genetic risk to result in bacterial overgrowth and aggressive ileitis. Further evidence in humans demonstrates the pathogenic potential for these dietary additives when combined with other risk factors, as supplementation of infant formula with a xanthan gum-based thickener induced late-onset necrotizing enterocolitis in premature infants" (Nickerson. 2015).
The purported mechanism by which these emulsifiers act mess with your gut is the way by which they act on the mucosal barrier to decrease viscosity, permitting bacterial translocation and thus potentially driving inflammation.
E171 aka Titanium DiOxide (TiO2) is another common food additive you want to avoid. Just like MDX it does appear to mess w/ the microbiome, but there's more!
So what? IBS is often "treated" (I should better say people try to ameliorate it) a Specific Carbohydrate Diet (SCD) or the IBD-Anti-Inflammatory Diet (IBD-AID), both of which prescribe the removal of of complex carbohydrates, starches, grains, and dairy from the diet and an emphasis on the consumption of specific vegetables, meats, homemade yogurt, and allowing some beans and hard cheeses, their actual efficacy, as well as their often observed inability to reduce the symptoms may well be mediated by their followers (in-)ability to effectively eliminating MDX (and other related emulsifiers and texturizers which are like many other food additives not allowed" on SCD and IBD-AID) from the diet.

For you, who hopefully don't suffer from IBD, Crohn's or ulcerative colitis (yet?), this means that you better stick to "real foods" - regardless of their sugar content - and try to avoid the consumption of processed (and sugar-reduced) industrial food products that require MDX and emulsifiers to be palatable | Comment on Facebook!
References:

  • Jostins, Luke, et al. "Host-microbe interactions have shaped the genetic architecture of inflammatory bowel disease." Nature 491.7422 (2012): 119-124.
  • Nickerson, Kourtney P., Rachael Chanin, and Christine McDonald. "Deregulation of intestinal anti-microbial defense by the dietary additive, maltodextrin." Gut microbes 6.1 (2015): 78-83.
  • Spooren, C. E. G. M., et al. "Review article: the association of diet with onset and relapse in patients with inflammatory bowel disease." Alimentary pharmacology & therapeutics 38.10 (2013): 1172-1187.
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