Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
Frankie Muniz praised for avoiding pitfalls as ‘Malcolm in the Middle’ cast reunites

Frankie Muniz praised for avoiding pitfalls as ‘Malcolm in the Middle’ cast reunites

April 11, 2026
Katseye Performs Without Manon Bannerman at Coachella 2026 Amid Her Hiatus From the Group

Katseye Performs Without Manon Bannerman at Coachella 2026 Amid Her Hiatus From the Group

April 11, 2026
Dodgers’ new cooler cups’ price leaves sour taste in fans’ mouths

Dodgers’ new cooler cups’ price leaves sour taste in fans’ mouths

April 11, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Frankie Muniz praised for avoiding pitfalls as ‘Malcolm in the Middle’ cast reunites
  • Katseye Performs Without Manon Bannerman at Coachella 2026 Amid Her Hiatus From the Group
  • Dodgers’ new cooler cups’ price leaves sour taste in fans’ mouths
  • Science news this week: Artemis II splashes down, the world’s fattest parrot bounces back, and the Shroud of Turin is contaminated
  • JD Vance enters high-stakes peace talks with Iranian officials in Pakistan
  • BROADCAST BIAS: Networks stay negative on Trump even after Iran ceasefire
  • ‘Love on the Spectrum’ Stars Abbey Romeo and David Isaacman Break Silence After Split
  • Warriors fall to lowly Kings in supposed postseason rehearsal
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Do the microbes in your gut influence what foods you like?
Do the microbes in your gut influence what foods you like?
Science

Do the microbes in your gut influence what foods you like?

News RoomBy News RoomApril 11, 20261 ViewsNo Comments

Scientists have identified more than 3,000 species of bacteria living in the human gut. We know they play a role in digestion and immune function. But can they also influence the kinds of food we crave?

In a 2014 study in the journal BioEssays, researchers proposed that gut microbes might manipulate the eating behavior of their hosts by generating cravings for foods the bacteria thrive on, or even causing discomfort until the host eats what benefits them.

“We don’t always see eye to eye with our microbes,” Dr. Joe Alcock, co-author of the study and a professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of New Mexico, told Live Science.


You may like

SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER

(Image credit: Marilyn Perkins / Future)

Sign up for our weekly Life’s Little Mysteries newsletter to get the latest mysteries before they appear online.

Salmonella Typhimurium is one example. It hijacks the chemical signals between the gut and brain to keep its host eating through infection.

“Typically, when you have a GI [gastrointestinal] infection, you stop eating,” Alcock said. “And Salmonella [Typhimurium] seems to actually impair that … so that animals continue to eat and continue to produce infectious particles in their poop that go on to infect other animals.”

However, this was a theoretical paper — it proposed mechanisms by which microbes could manipulate cravings, but hadn’t demonstrated that they do. The pathways it proposed — including things like altering taste receptors and hijacking the vagus nerve — were plausible, but unconfirmed, especially in the context of everyday food cravings.

How the microbiome may influence food choices

In 2022, researchers tested this hypothesis. In their study, Kevin Kohl, an associate professor of biology who focuses on how interactions with microbes impact the physiology, ecology and evolution of animal hosts at the University of Pittsburgh, and Brian Trevelline, a microbiologist and postdoctoral fellow at Cornell University, transplanted microbiomes from wild rodents with different diets — carnivore, herbivore and omnivore — into germ-free mice, and then measured what they ate.

“I perhaps naively thought that the carnivore-inoculated mice were going to eat the high-protein diet,” Kohl told Live Science. “That’s not what we saw.”

Instead, the mice with herbivore microbiomes preferred protein, while the mice with carnivore microbiomes preferred carbs. But a key finding held: Different microbiomes led to significantly different food choices.

But how? Gut bacteria can produce many of the same neurotransmitters the brain uses to regulate appetite, including serotonin, which signals to the brain when you’ve had enough to eat. In fact, roughly 90% of the body’s serotonin is produced in the gut, not in the brain, and research has shown that gut bacteria play a direct role in that production.


What to read next

I could totally see some feedback cycles where shifts in the microbiome either perpetuate behaviors or bring about different cravings

Kevin Kohl, associate professor of biology at the University of Pittsburgh

In the mouse study, the team found that the mice that received the herbivore microbiome had significantly more tryptophan — a building block of serotonin — in their blood. Previous research has shown that higher serotonin levels suppress carbohydrate cravings in particular, which may explain why those mice shifted toward a high-protein diet.

“That might be at least one potential avenue in which the microbiome is affecting diet, appetite and dietary preferences,” Trevelline said.

The findings also raise the possibility that the relationship runs both ways. If your microbiome shapes your cravings, and your diet shapes your microbiome, small changes in what you eat could shift the cycle over time.

“I could totally see some feedback cycles where shifts in the microbiome either perpetuate behaviors or bring about different cravings,” Kohl said.

However, Kohl and Trevelline’s study was in mice. “Food choice is really tricky and totally different in humans,” Kohl said. “It’s influenced by culture, society, economics, learned behaviors, associations.” In other words, a lot of other factors affect our dietary choices.

Still, one recent research paper has started to connect these findings to human health. In a 2025 study published in the journal Nature Microbiology, researchers found that a gut bacterium called Bacteroides vulgatus can suppress sugar cravings in mice by producing a metabolite that triggers the production of glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), the same hormone targeted by drugs like Ozempic. People with type 2 diabetes also had lower levels of this bacterium, the researchers found.

But Kohl cautioned against giving your microbes too much credit for your choices. “Free will still exists,” he said. “The microbes are not driving our choices. But these cravings, low-grade feelings about food — those come from our internal nutritional state” — things like amino acids and other compounds circulating in the body — “which we know is influenced by the microbiome.”

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Science news this week: Artemis II splashes down, the world’s fattest parrot bounces back, and the Shroud of Turin is contaminated

Science news this week: Artemis II splashes down, the world’s fattest parrot bounces back, and the Shroud of Turin is contaminated

10 Artemis II photos that define humanity’s return to the moon

10 Artemis II photos that define humanity’s return to the moon

‘I’m at a loss for words’: Artemis II mission comes home with a ‘bullseye landing’ to joy and cheers after historic 10-day mission

‘I’m at a loss for words’: Artemis II mission comes home with a ‘bullseye landing’ to joy and cheers after historic 10-day mission

The moon is green and brown? Why scientists are already excited about Artemis II’s historic lunar photos

The moon is green and brown? Why scientists are already excited about Artemis II’s historic lunar photos

There are ‘reasons to be confident’ about faulty Artemis II heat shield ahead of 25,000 mph reentry, space expert Ed Macaulay says

There are ‘reasons to be confident’ about faulty Artemis II heat shield ahead of 25,000 mph reentry, space expert Ed Macaulay says

Artemis II returns LIVE: Artemis II crew now awake and preparing for record-breaking return to Earth

Artemis II returns LIVE: Artemis II crew now awake and preparing for record-breaking return to Earth

‘I’ve seen the movies. What a horrible way to die’: What it’s like to be sucked into a tornado and survive

‘I’ve seen the movies. What a horrible way to die’: What it’s like to be sucked into a tornado and survive

‘More questions than answers’: Experts baffled by Alaskan mammal-eating orcas spotted near Seattle

‘More questions than answers’: Experts baffled by Alaskan mammal-eating orcas spotted near Seattle

Changing ‘just one DNA letter’ in female mice triggers growth of male genitalia

Changing ‘just one DNA letter’ in female mice triggers growth of male genitalia

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Katseye Performs Without Manon Bannerman at Coachella 2026 Amid Her Hiatus From the Group

Katseye Performs Without Manon Bannerman at Coachella 2026 Amid Her Hiatus From the Group

April 11, 2026
Dodgers’ new cooler cups’ price leaves sour taste in fans’ mouths

Dodgers’ new cooler cups’ price leaves sour taste in fans’ mouths

April 11, 2026
Science news this week: Artemis II splashes down, the world’s fattest parrot bounces back, and the Shroud of Turin is contaminated

Science news this week: Artemis II splashes down, the world’s fattest parrot bounces back, and the Shroud of Turin is contaminated

April 11, 2026
JD Vance enters high-stakes peace talks with Iranian officials in Pakistan

JD Vance enters high-stakes peace talks with Iranian officials in Pakistan

April 11, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
BROADCAST BIAS: Networks stay negative on Trump even after Iran ceasefire

BROADCAST BIAS: Networks stay negative on Trump even after Iran ceasefire

April 11, 2026
‘Love on the Spectrum’ Stars Abbey Romeo and David Isaacman Break Silence After Split

‘Love on the Spectrum’ Stars Abbey Romeo and David Isaacman Break Silence After Split

April 11, 2026
Warriors fall to lowly Kings in supposed postseason rehearsal

Warriors fall to lowly Kings in supposed postseason rehearsal

April 11, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.