Illustration of laboratory mice demonstrating effects of a sucrose-free diet on glucose tolerance and gut health.
Illustration of laboratory mice demonstrating effects of a sucrose-free diet on glucose tolerance and gut health.
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Mice on sucrose-free low-fat diet showed impaired glucose control and gut inflammation, researchers report

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An Binciki Gaskiya

Eliminating sucrose from a low-fat diet worsened glucose tolerance and altered the gut microbiome in mice over 16 weeks, according to results presented on Saturday, June 13, 2026, at ENDO 2026, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago.

Mice fed a sucrose-free low-fat diet for 16 weeks developed impaired glucose tolerance and reduced insulin sensitivity compared with mice fed a sucrose-containing low-fat diet, according to an abstract and conference news release tied to ENDO 2026.

Researchers also reported major shifts in gut microbial diversity and composition based on 16S rRNA sequencing, including depletion of some short-chain fatty acid–producing bacteria and enrichment of taxa described as more pro-inflammatory or stress-adapted. The team linked these changes with colonic inflammation, describing tissue damage and increased immune-cell infiltration in the colon.

The investigators further reported liver findings consistent with activation of the so-called gut–liver axis, including microvesicular fat accumulation and lobular inflammation, alongside increased liver inflammatory signals.

“Completely removing sucrose from a low-fat diet may unexpectedly disrupt gut health and promote inflammation and metabolic dysfunction, highlighting that balanced nutrition is more important than simply eliminating sugar,” said Rasheed Ahmad, Ph.D., principal scientist at the Dasman Diabetes Institute in Kuwait City, who presented the work.

Ahmad also said the results underscore the importance of maintaining “balanced dietary carbohydrates to support gut and immune homeostasis.”

Faisal Hamed Al-Refaei, M.D., acting director general of the Dasman Diabetes Institute, said studies like this reflect the institute’s commitment to evidence-based research aimed at improving public health outcomes.

The findings were reported from an animal study presented at a scientific meeting and have not, on their own, established that removing sucrose would have the same effects in humans.

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Initial reactions on X express surprise at the counterintuitive findings that eliminating sucrose worsened glucose control and caused gut issues in mice, with some users emphasizing balanced diets over strict sugar elimination and one voicing skepticism toward medical research.

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Illustration of a lab mouse showing brain changes from childhood junk food diet, with helpful bacteria depicted.
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Childhood junk food may leave lasting changes in brain circuits that guide eating, mouse study suggests

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Researchers at APC Microbiome Ireland at University College Cork report that early-life exposure to a high-fat, high-sugar diet altered feeding behavior and appetite-related brain pathways in mice into adulthood, even after the animals returned to a standard diet and normal body weight. The team also found that a specific Bifidobacterium strain and a prebiotic fiber mix helped mitigate some of these long-term effects.

A small clinical trial found that short periods of calorie restriction lowered inflammation markers tied to gum disease. Researchers at King's College London led the study involving patients in Spain. The results suggest dietary changes could complement standard dental treatments.

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Researchers at Case Western Reserve University report that some gut bacteria can make unusually inflammatory forms of glycogen and that this microbial glycogen can trigger immune activity linked to brain inflammation in models of disease tied to the C9orf72 mutation. In patient stool samples, the team found these glycogen forms more often in ALS and C9orf72-related frontotemporal dementia than in healthy controls, and enzymatically breaking down glycogen in the gut improved outcomes in mice.

A year-long observational study in Japan suggests that people with type 2 diabetes who tend to overeat in response to tempting food cues such as sight and smell may see greater weight loss—and possibly better blood-sugar improvement—after starting GLP-1 receptor agonists, while those with primarily emotional eating patterns show less consistent links to long-term outcomes.

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New research links chronic stress combined with late-night eating to increased risks of constipation, diarrhea, and reduced gut microbiome diversity. Scientists analyzed data from over 11,000 participants in a national survey. The findings are set to be presented at Digestive Disease Week on May 4.

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