How to optimize your gut and brain bacteria | Dave Asprey | Big Think
The gut microbiome — and surprisingly the brain — harbor bacteria that profoundly shape health and longevity. Increasing microbial diversity through diet, prebiotics, and intermittent fasting are the primary levers for optimizing both. ---
Key Concepts
| Concept | Definition |
|---|---|
| Microbiome | The community of bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites living in the gut (and, newly discovered, the brain) |
| Gut-brain bacteria connection | Healthy brains contain the same bacterial species found in the gut, challenging assumptions about the blood-brain barrier |
| Microbial diversity | Higher species count correlates with slower aging; gut bacteria populations can predict a person's age within a few years |
| Prebiotics | Dietary compounds that feed beneficial gut bacteria; argued to have greater impact than probiotics |
| Akkermansia muciniphila | A specific bacterium that maintains gut lining integrity by cycling mucus; critical for preventing systemic inflammation from intestinal permeability ("leaky gut") |
| Intermittent fasting | Eating within a 6–8 hour daily window; stimulates gut repair cycles and strengthens Akkermansia |
| Metabolic flexibility | The ability to run efficiently on fat rather than constant carbohydrate intake, enabling comfortable extended fasting |
Notes
The State of Microbiome Research
- Functional medicine flagged microbiome importance 20+ years ago; robust data only recently available
- Company **Viome** has sequenced 100,000+ stool samples using bio-warfare detection technology
- Detects: bacteria, viruses, fungi, parasites, human DNA percentage, gut lining shedding
- Added 10,000 previously unknown gut bacterial species to scientific databases
Brain Microbiome Discovery
- Modern cellular imaging (beyond electron microscope resolution) found **bacteria living inside healthy human brains**
- Same species present in the gut — suggesting deep biological integration
- Undermines conventional understanding of the blood-brain barrier
Diversity as a Longevity Marker
- Long-lived people consistently show **greater gut bacterial diversity**
- Gut bacteria populations can predict a person's age within a couple of years
- Aging is associated with declining microbial diversity
Diet and Species Count
- Asprey's personal example: gut species rose from **48 → 196** during writing of *Superhuman*
- Common failure mode: insufficient vegetable intake, especially while traveling
- Longevity diet pattern observed in long-lived populations:
- Large plate of vegetables
- Moderate/small amount of grass-fed or wild-caught protein
- Plenty of healthy, undamaged fats
Prebiotics vs. Probiotics
- **Prebiotics** (food for good bacteria) shown to have more influence on gut composition than probiotics
- Both have a role, but prebiotics are the higher-leverage intervention
- Asprey's protocol: a few scoops of prebiotic powder added to Bulletproof Coffee each morning
- Additional sources: variety of spices, herbs, and diverse vegetables
Akkermansia and Gut Lining Integrity
- **Akkermansia** eats and then **refreshes** the gut's mucus lining — a maintenance cycle, not simple degradation
- Healthy Akkermansia → intact gut barrier → nutrients absorbed without systemic inflammation
- Damaged or absent Akkermansia → food particles leak into bloodstream → chronic inflammation
Intermittent Fasting and Gut Repair
- Fasting strengthens Akkermansia and triggers gut repair cycles
- **Protocol**: skip breakfast; eat within a 6–8 hour window (lunch + dinner)
- Rationale: when the gut is always full, normal repair cycles are interrupted
- Extended fasting (24 hours, once a week or every few weeks) becomes comfortable with metabolic flexibility
- Metabolic flexibility is built by eating sufficient fat and not relying on constant carbohydrate intake
Actionable Takeaways
- **Eat a large, varied plate of vegetables** at meals — diversity of plant matter drives microbial diversity
- **Add a prebiotic supplement** to a morning drink or meal as a consistent daily habit
- **Practice intermittent fasting** — compress eating into a 6–8 hour window to allow gut repair
- **Consider extended fasting** (24 hours) periodically once metabolic flexibility is established
- **Avoid antibiotics in food** — choose grass-fed or wild-caught protein to protect bacterial populations
- **Incorporate diverse spices and herbs** alongside vegetables to further support species variety
- **Test your gut microbiome** (e.g., via Viome) to get a baseline species count and track progress
Quotes Worth Keeping
Old people have bad poop — can I just say it.
The people who live a long time eat a plate of vegetables with a moderate to small amount of grass-fed or wild-caught protein and lots of healthy undamaged fats — that's the recipe.
If you're always full of food… your gut doesn't get to go through the normal cycles that the gut should go through.