Metabolism of protein by gut bacteria is potentially detrimental due to the production of toxic metabolites, such as ammonia, amines, -cresol, and indole. The consumption of prebiotic carbohydrates results in specific changes in the composition and/or activity of the microbiota that may confer benefits to host well-being and health. Here, we have studied the impact of prebiotics on proteolysis within the gut Anaerobic stirred batch cultures were inoculated with feces from omnivores ( = 3) and vegetarians ( = 3) and four protein sources (casein, meat, mycoprotein, and soy protein) with and without supplementation by an oligofructose-enriched inulin. Bacterial counts and concentrations of short-chain fatty acids (SCFA), ammonia, phenol, indole, and -cresol were monitored during fermentation. Addition of the fructan prebiotic Synergy1 increased levels of bifidobacteria ( = 0.000019 and 0.000013 for omnivores and vegetarians, respectively). Branched-chain fatty acids (BCFA) were significantly lower in fermenters with vegetarians' feces ( = 0.004), reduced further by prebiotic treatment. Ammonia production was lower with Synergy1. Bacterial adaptation to different dietary protein sources was observed through different patterns of ammonia production between vegetarians and omnivores. In volunteer samples with high baseline levels of phenol, indole, -cresol, and skatole, Synergy1 fermentation led to a reduction of these compounds. Dietary protein intake is high in Western populations, which could result in potentially harmful metabolites in the gut from proteolysis. In an fermentation model, the addition of prebiotics reduced the negative consequences of high protein levels. Supplementation with a prebiotic resulted in a reduction of proteolytic metabolites in the model. A difference was seen in protein fermentation between omnivore and vegetarian gut microbiotas: bacteria from vegetarian donors grew more on soy and Quorn than on meat and casein, with reduced ammonia production. Bacteria from vegetarian donors produced less branched-chain fatty acids (BCFA).

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6495761PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02749-18DOI Listing

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