detalle del documento
IDENTIFICACIÓN

doi:10.1186/s12866-024-03235-2...

Autor
Xie, Zhuqing He, Weiwei Gobbi, Alex Bertram, Hanne Christine Nielsen, Dennis Sandris
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Categoría

Mycology

Año

2024

fecha de cotización

13/3/2024

Palabras clave
colonic ph in vitro colonic fermentation gut microbiota short-chain fatty acids prebiotics activity influenced dietary effect production metabolite increased gm vitro substrates ph
Métrico

Resumen

Background The interplay between gut microbiota (GM) and the metabolization of dietary components leading to the production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) is affected by a range of factors including colonic pH and carbohydrate source.

However, there is still only limited knowledge on how the GM activity and metabolite production in the gastrointestinal tract could be influenced by pH and the pH gradient increases along the colon.

Results Here we investigate the effect of pH gradients corresponding to levels typically found in the colon on GM composition and metabolite production using substrates inulin, lactose, galactooligosaccharides (GOS), and fructooligosaccharide (FOS) in an in vitro colon setup.

We investigated 3 different pH regimes (low, 5.2 increasing to 6.4; medium, 5.6 increasing to 6.8 and high, 6.0 increasing to 7.2) for each fecal inoculum and found that colonic pH gradients significantly influenced in vitro simulated GM structure, but the influence of fecal donor and substrate was more pronounced.

Low pH regimes strongly influenced GM with the decreased relative abundance of Bacteroides spp. and increased Bifidobacterium spp.

Higher in vitro simulated colonic pH promoted the production of SCFAs in a donor- and substrate-dependent manner.

The butyrate producer Butyricimonas was enriched at higher pH conditions, where also butyrate production was increased for inulin.

The relative abundance of Phascolarctobacterium , Bacteroides , and Rikenellaceae also increased at higher colonic pH, which was accompanied by increased production of propionate with GOS and FOS as substrates.

Conclusions Together, our results show that colonic substrates such as dietary fibres influence GM composition and metabolite production, not only by being selectively utilized by specific microbes, but also because of their SCFA production, which in turn also influences colonic pH and overall GM composition and activity.

Our work provides details about the effect of the gradients of rising pH from the proximal to distal colon on fermenting dietary substrates in vitro and highlights the importance of considering pH in GM research.

Xie, Zhuqing,He, Weiwei,Gobbi, Alex,Bertram, Hanne Christine,Nielsen, Dennis Sandris, 2024, The effect of in vitro simulated colonic pH gradients on microbial activity and metabolite production using common prebiotics as substrates, BioMed Central

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