Metabolism and obesity: influence of prebiotics, probiotics and symbiotics on microbiomes and liver health

Prebiotic, probiotic and symbiotic treatments affect intestinal and adipose tissue microbiomes, as well as gut and liver metabolites

This article by Yde et al., explored the changes in the microbiota composition and metabolite levels induced by pre- and/or probiotic in an HFD mouse model:

→ This study examined the cross-talk between gut and liver and showed changes in the microbiota composition and metabolite levels induced by the HFD and probiotic (polydextrose, PDX), prebiotic (Bifidobacterium animalis ssp. lactis 420, B420) or symbiotic (PDX+B420) intervention using a murine model.

→ Prebiotic PDX intervention reduced body weight gain and hepatic fat. PDX both alone and in combination with probiotic B420 increased the prevalence of Akkermansia both in gut and in mesenteric adipose tissue. Akkermansia muciniphila has previously been associated with lean phenotype and healthy metabolism.

CITATIONS

Tissue microbiomes_1

Polydextrose with and without Bifidobacterium animalis ssp. lactis 420 drives the prevalence of Akkermansia and improves liver health in a multi-compartmental obesogenic mice study

→In collaboration with Vaiomer

Yde CC, Jensen HM, Christensen N, Servant F, Lelouvier B, Lahtinen S, Stenman LK, Airaksinen K, Kailanto HM. PLoS One. 2021 Dec 2;16(12): e0260765. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0260765. PMID: 34855861; PMCID: PMC8638982.

The past two decades of research have raised gut microbiota composition as a contributing factor to the development of obesity, and higher abundance of certain bacterial species has been linked to the lean phenotype, such as Akkermansia muciniphila. The ability of pre- and probiotics to affect metabolic health could be via microbial community alterations and subsequently changes in metabolite profiles, modulating for example host energy balance via complex signaling pathways. The aim of this mice study was to determine how administration of a prebiotic fiber, polydextrose (PDX) and a probiotic Bifidobacterium animalis ssp. lactis 420 (B420), during high fat diet (HFD; 60 kcal% fat) affects microbiota composition in the gastrointestinal tract and adipose tissue, and metabolite levels in gut and liver. In this study C57Bl/6J mice (N = 200) were split in five treatments and daily gavaged: 1) Normal control (NC); 2) HFD; 3) HFD + PDX; 4) HFD + B420 or 5) HFD + PDX + B420 (HFD+S). At six weeks of treatment intraperitoneal glucose-tolerance test (IPGTT) was performed, and feces were collected at weeks 0, 3, 6 and 9. At end of the intervention, ileum and colon mucosa, adipose tissue and liver samples were collected. The microbiota composition in fecal, ileum, colon and adipose tissue was analyzed using 16S rDNA sequencing, fecal and liver metabolomics were performed by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. It was found that HFD+PDX intervention reduced body weight gain and hepatic fat compared to HFD. Sequencing the mice adipose tissue (MAT) identified Akkermansia and its prevalence was increased in HFD+S group. Furthermore, by the inclusion of PDX, fecal, lleum and colon levels of Akkermansia were increased and liver health was improved as the detoxification capacity and levels of methyl-donors were increased. These new results demonstrate how PDX and B420 can affect the interactions between gut, liver and adipose tissue.

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