Older gut microbes unexpectedly rejuvenate ovaries in young mice

TL;DR Summary
USC researchers found that fecal transplants from older mice into young, germ-free mice improved ovarian health and accelerated pup production, challenging the assumption that older microbiomes harm youth. The results suggest greater gut microbial diversity or altered estrogen signaling as potential mechanisms, but the exact reasons and relevance to humans remain unknown.
- Elderly Poop Transplants Had a Surprising Effect on Young Mouse Ovaries ScienceAlert
- Estropausal gut microbiota transplant improves measures of ovarian function in adult mice Nature
- Study links gut microbiome health directly to ovarian aging processes News-Medical
- Fecal transplants from old mice boost fertility in younger ones Scientific American
- Could overhauling our gut microbiome delay menopause? New research suggests so bodyandsoul.com.au
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
1
Time Saved
5 min
vs 6 min read
Condensed
95%
1,102 → 52 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on ScienceAlert