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Diverse high-fat diets drive multi-omic reprogramming that persists after dietary reversal

Van Camp, A. G.; Park, J.; Ozcelik, E.; Eskiocak, O.; Ozler, K. A.; Papciak, K.; Subhash, S.; Alwaseem, H.; Ergin, I.; Chung, C.; Shah, V.; Yueh, B.; Fein, M. R.; Durmaz, C.; Mozsary, C.; Kilic, E.; Garipcan, A.; Damle, N.; Najjar, D.; Nelson, T. M.; Ryon, K. A.; Butler, D. J.; Patel, C. J.; Thaiss, C. A.; Birsoy, K.; Mason, C. E.; Meydan, C.; Tierney, B. T.; Beyaz, S.

2026-03-19 systems biology
10.64898/2026.03.17.708620 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Dietary fat composition modulates host physiology and the gut microbiome, but the long-term effects of specific fat sources and the extent to which these changes resolve after dietary reversal remain incompletely defined. Here, we present a longitudinal multi-omic resource of mice maintained for one year on a purified control diet, seven high-fat diets differing in predominant fat source, or reversal regimens in which animals were switched from high-fat to control diet after 4 or 9 months. We further incorporated two cohorts with distinct pre-existing microbiome configurations to determine how baseline community structure shapes diet-induced remodeling of the gut microbiome ecosystem. By integrating longitudinal phenotyping, fecal metagenomics, fecal metabolomics, plasma metabolomics and lipidomics, and intestinal single-cell RNA sequencing, we defined the shared and dietary fat-specific responses across host and microbiome compartments. Baseline microbiome composition strongly influenced microbial responses to diet, indicating that pre-existing community structure is a major determinant of dietary ecosystem remodeling. Although many altered features shifted toward baseline after dietary reversal, only approximately half of diet-associated microbial changes recovered within the study window. A subset of taxa exhibited persistent alterations, including sustained depletion of Lactobacillus johnsonii and Bifidobacterium pseudolongum and sustained enrichment of Alistipes finegoldii, consistent with a "microbiome memory" of prior high-fat diet exposure. This memory effect is mirrored in the host, by sustained suppression of major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II) gene expression in intestinal epithelial cells after dietary reversal. These findings indicate that dietary fats leave a lasting imprint on the host-microbiome interactome that survives dietary intervention. Together, these data establish a resource for defining how dietary fat source, baseline microbiome composition, and dietary history shape host-microbiome states. The entire resource is available online as an RShiny app.

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