Diet Quality Modulates Gut Microbiota Structure in Blastocystis‐Colonised Individuals from Two Distinct Cohorts with Contrasting Sociodemographic Profiles

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Abstract

Diet and gut microbiota are key determinants of host health, but their interaction in Blastocystis-colonised individuals remains poorly understood. We evaluated the rela-tionship between diet quality, faecal microbial diversity, and Blastocystis colonisation in two cohorts: university students (FACSA) and institutionalised children with their caregivers (PAVILA), all Blastocystis-positive subjects. We assessed diet quality using the Healthy Eating Index-2020 (HEI-2020), and we characterised faecal microbiota by 16S rRNA sequencing. Alpha and beta diversity were analysed, and genus-level trans-formed data were further evaluated using PERMANOVA, PCoA, and db-RDA. The FACSA cohort presented higher microbial richness and diversity (Shannon and Simpson indexes) than PAVILA (p < 0.01), and microbial composition differed signifi-cantly between cohorts (PERMANOVA R² = 0.39, p = 0.002). Total diet quality was as-sociated with microbial structure (R² = 0.26, p = 0.016), with protein (R² = 0.23, p = 0.017) and vegetable (R² = 0.17, p = 0.044) components being the main contributors. Multivariate analysis showed higher protein and vegetable intakes were associated with genera such as Sellimonas, Murimonas, Alistipes and Desulfovibrio (FACSA group). In contrast, Hydrogenoanaerobacterium, V9D2013_group and Haemophilus were related to lower-quality diets (PAVILA group). Despite universal colonisation by Blastocystis, differences in microbial diversity and structure reflect a modulating effect of diet con-ditioned by the sociodemographic environment. These findings suggest the relevance of dietary quality as a modulator of the gut microbiota in populations colonised by Blastocystis and may guide future nutritional interventions in vulnerable groups.

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