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Can your gut bacteria affect your weight?

Your gut bacteria play many essential roles in your health. They help boost your immunity, digest nutrients, make vitamins, lift your mood, and more. On top of this, your gut bacteria help control your weight in several ways.

This article explains how your gut bacteria can affect your weight.

What are gut bacteria?

There are trillions of bacteria living inside your gut. Collectively, they are called your gut microbiota and play a massive role in your health.

Your gut bacteria play important roles, such as:

  • Producing vitamins like vitamin K
  • Digesting nutrients, like fiber
  • Communicating with your immune system
  • Supporting brain health
  • Lifting your mood by making chemicals like serotonin — the “happy” hormone

While many gut bacteria are friendly, an overgrowth of harmful species—gut dysbiosis—has been linked to inflammation, weight gain, obesity, inflammatory bowel disease, insulin resistance, and certain cancers.

Factors that can cause dysbiosis include:

  • Low intake of fiber-rich foods
  • Poor dietary diversity (fruits, vegetables, whole grains)
  • Infrequent exercise
  • Excessive alcohol consumption
  • Stress
  • Smoking
  • Poor sleep

Summary: Gut bacteria are vital for health—digesting nutrients, making vitamins, supporting mood and brain function, and aiding immunity. An imbalance, however, is linked to many diseases.

How your gut bacteria affect your weight

Your gut bacteria influence your weight in two key ways:

Affecting food digestion

Bacteria in your intestines contact the food you eat and affect nutrient absorption and energy storage. They help break down fiber and produce beneficial compounds that may promote weight loss.

Affecting your appetite

Your body regulates hunger with hormones like leptin, ghrelin, peptide YY, and GLP-1. Studies show gut bacteria can alter levels of these hormones—affecting how hungry or full you feel.

For example, certain bacterial metabolites boost satiety hormones, while dysbiosis may raise ghrelin, the “hunger” hormone.

Summary: Gut bacteria affect weight by influencing both digestion and appetite regulation.


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Blog written by Ryan Raman MHSC, RD

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