Publications

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2025 School of Pharmacy IDOSR JOURNAL OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH

Role of the Gut Microbiome in Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes Pathogenesis

Ahereza Prissy

Diabetes mellitus, encompassing type 1 (T1D) and type 2 (T2D), has traditionally been viewed through lenses of genetics, autoimmunity, insulin resistance, and environmental risk factors such as diet and obesity. Recent advances in microbiome research have identified the gut microbiome as a potentially pivotal player in the pathogenesis of both forms of diabetes. In T1D, alterations in the early‐life microbiota, impaired intestinal barrier function, dysregulated immune development, and specific microbial taxa shifts precede or accompany islet autoimmunity. In T2D the gut microbiome influences metabolic regulation through modulation of energy harvest, short‐chain fatty acid (SCFA) production, bile acid metabolism, lipopolysaccharide (LPS)‐driven endotoxemia, inflammation, and insulin sensitivity. This review surveys the current evidence linking gut microbial composition and function to both T1D and T2D pathogenesis, explores mechanistic studies elucidating causal pathways, examines how modifiable factors (diet, antibiotics, mode of birth, probiotics/prebiotics) might influence risk, and evaluates translational prospects for microbiome‐based interventions. We emphasize that while cross‐sectional human studies are abundant, prospective cohort, mechanistic animal, and intervention studies are fewer, leaving gaps in the understanding of causality and heterogeneity among individuals. Ultimately, harnessing the gut microbiome may enable novel prevention or therapeutic strategies, but rigorous trials, better biomarkers, and understanding of host‐microbiome interactions remain essential.