Thanks for the interesting article
This subject interests me greatly.
I have a question. On what data you base the following statements:
... bacteria inside our bodies... play a vital role in process such as digestion.
In effect they are the first link in the chain that leads from diet to metabolism...
...it seems likely that changes or differences in gut microbe populations - some of which are preprocessing your dietary intake....
You make it sound as if we are some ruminants or termites who wholly depend on their gut microbiome for digestion. Humans on antibiotics digest their food just fine (and some even better than before a course of antibiotics). For digestion we mostly rely on the enzymes produced by our pancreas and the small intestine; and while microbes certainly contribute a variety of metabolites --both good and bad-- their influence on our digestion per se is negligible (even though, true, some were implicated in aggravating the rampant in the western world hyperphagia and the resultant epidemic of obesity -- hardly a positive in this context).
As far as CR goes, I know for a fact that the population of the gut bacteria changes. First of all, their sheer numbers go down dramatically, which is a good thing: there is less policing for the immune system to do and less metabolites for the liver to process.
The worst of the metabolites produced by our gut commensals is lipopolysaccharide (LPS endotoxin). It does get absorbed into the bloodstream and it is the job of the liver to remove it. I read that patients with advanced liver disease are routinely given antibiotics, not because they have an infections, but to keep their gut bacteria --and their toxic metabolites-- down.
http://ajcn.nutritio.../86/5/1286.long
...bacterial endotoxin [lipopolysaccharide (LPS)] is a potently inflammatory bacterial antigen that is present in large quantities in the human gut (8). Endotoxin circulates in the plasma of healthy human subjects at low concentrations (between 1 and 200 pg/mL; 9–13), yet it is increasingly considered to play a proatherogenic role (reviewed in reference 14). Elevated concentrations of circulating LPS correlate well with an increased atherosclerosis risk (9), whereas in vitro studies have shown LPS to potently up-regulate atherogenic gene expression (15), cholesterol retention, and foam cell formation (16).
I wanted to bring this to your attention, because IMO you exaggerate the positive impact of gut bacteria on our health and appear largely unaware of the negatives. Overall, on the balance, we do better without them then with them, and people on antibiotics, for various reasons, prove it. (Of course, it is impossible in practice to live 'without them', but that would be another topic.)