Apr 17, 2024
Is Your Sleep Schedule Making You Sick? New Research Links Irregular Sleep to Harmful Gut Bacteria
By King's College LondonAugust 4, 2023 Irregular sleep patterns, or social jet lag, can influence gut health, diet quality, and raise health risks, according to new research. The study finds even a
By King's College LondonAugust 4, 2023
Irregular sleep patterns, or social jet lag, can influence gut health, diet quality, and raise health risks, according to new research. The study finds even a 90-minute change in sleep schedule could cause shifts in gut bacteria, promoting species linked to health issues like obesity and heart disease.
Recent research has discovered a link between inconsistent sleep schedules and the presence of harmful gut bacteria.
The findings, recently published in The European Journal of Nutrition, are a collaboration between scientists from King’s College London and ZOE, a personalized nutrition company. This is the first study that identifies numerous links among social jet lag – the internal body clock shift occurring when sleep patterns vary between workdays and days off – and factors like diet quality, dietary habits, inflammation, and gut microbiome composition in a single cohort.
Previous research has shown that working shifts disrupt the body clock and can increase the risk of weight gain, heart problems, and diabetes. However, there is less awareness that our biological rhythms can be affected by smaller inconsistencies in sleeping patterns due to waking early with an alarm clock on workdays, for example, compared to waking naturally on non-workdays for people working regular hours.
Senior author Dr. Wendy Hall from King’s College London said: “We know that major disruptions in sleep, such as shift work, can have a profound impact on your health. This is the first study to show that even small differences in sleep timings across the week seem to be linked to differences in gut bacterial speciesA species is a group of living organisms that share a set of common characteristics and are able to breed and produce fertile offspring. The concept of a species is important in biology as it is used to classify and organize the diversity of life. There are different ways to define a species, but the most widely accepted one is the biological species concept, which defines a species as a group of organisms that can interbreed and produce viable offspring in nature. This definition is widely used in evolutionary biology and ecology to identify and classify living organisms." data-gt-translate-attributes="[{"attribute":"data-cmtooltip", "format":"html"}]">species. Some of these associations were linked to dietary differences but our data also indicates that other, as yet unknown, factors may be involved. We need intervention trials to find out whether improving sleep time consistency can lead to beneficial changes in the gut microbiome and related health outcomes.”
The composition of the microbes in your gut (microbiome) may negatively or positively affect your health by producing toxins or beneficial metabolites. Specific species of microbes can correspond to an individual’s risk of long-term health conditions such as diabetes, heart disease, and obesity. The microbiome is influenced by the food you consume which makes the diversity of your gut adjustable.
In a cohort of 934 people from the ZOE PREDICT study, the largest ongoing nutritional study of its kind, researchers assessed blood, stool, and gut microbiome samples as well as glucose measurements in those whose sleep was irregular compared to those who had a routine sleep schedule. While previous studies into the association between social jet lag and metabolic risk factors have been done in populations with obesity or diabetes, this cohort consisted of mainly lean and healthy individuals with most getting more than seven hours of sleep per night throughout the week.
Researchers found that just a 90-minute difference in the timing of the midpoint of sleep – the halfway point between sleep time and wake-up time – is associated with differences in gut microbiome composition.
Having social jet lag was associated with lower overall diet quality, higher intakes of sugar-sweetened beverages, and lower intakes of fruits and nuts, which may directly influence the abundance of specific microbiota in your gut.
Three out of the six microbiota species that were more abundant in the social jet lag group have ‘unfavorable’ associations with health. These microbes are associated with poor diet quality, indicators of obesity and cardiometabolic health, and markers in your blood related to higher levels of inflammation and cardiovascular risk.
First author Kate Bermingham, Ph.D., from King’s College London and senior nutrition scientist at ZOE, said: “Sleep is a key pillar of health, and this research is particularly timely given the growing interest in circadian rhythms and the gut microbiome. Even a 90-minute difference in the mid-point of sleep can encourage microbiota species which have unfavorable associations with your health.”
Previous research has found social jetlag is associated with weight gain, chronic illness, and mental fatigue.
Dr. Sarah Berry from King’s College London and chief scientist at ZOE added: “Maintaining regular sleep patterns, so when we go to bed and when we wake each day, is an easily adjustable lifestyle behavior we can all do, that may impact your health via your gut microbiome for the better.”
Reference: “Exploring the relationship between social jetlag with gut microbial composition, diet and cardiometabolic health, in the ZOE PREDICT 1 cohort” by Kate M. Bermingham, Sophie Stensrud, Francesco Asnicar, Ana M. Valdes, Paul W. Franks, Jonathan Wolf, George Hadjigeorgiou, Richard Davies, Tim D. Spector, Nicola Segata, Sarah E. Berry and Wendy L. Hall, 2 August 2023, European Journal of Nutrition.DOI: 10.1007/s00394-023-03204-x