AI Article Synopsis

  • High fructose consumption can exceed the intestine's ability to absorb it, leading to malabsorption.
  • In a study using mice models, moderate fructose malabsorption resulted in increased expression of hormones like cholecystokinin (CCK) and changes in microbiota composition.
  • The altered microbiota and its metabolites, especially propionate, play a significant role in stimulating hormone production in the intestines due to the impact of undigested fructose.

Article Abstract

Current fructose consumption levels often overwhelm the intestinal capacity to absorb fructose. We investigated the impact of fructose malabsorption on intestinal endocrine function and addressed the role of the microbiota in this process. To answer this question, a mouse model of moderate fructose malabsorption [ketohexokinase mutant (KHK)] and wild-type (WT) littermate mice were used and received a 20%-fructose (KHK-F and WT-F) or 20%-glucose diet. Cholecystokinin () mRNA and protein expression in the ileum and cecum, as well as preproglucagon () and neurotensin () mRNA expression in the cecum, increased in KHK-F mice. In KHK-F mice, triple-label immunohistochemistry showed major up-regulation of CCK in enteroendocrine cells (EECs) that were glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1)/Peptide YY (PYY) in the ileum and colon and GLP-1/PYY in the cecum. The cecal microbiota composition was drastically modified in the KHK-F in association with an increase in glucose, propionate, succinate, and lactate concentrations. Antibiotic treatment abolished fructose malabsorption-dependent induction of cecal mRNA expression and, in mouse GLUTag and human NCI-H716 cells, mRNA expression levels increased in response to propionate, both suggesting a microbiota-dependent process. Fructose reaching the lower intestine can modify the composition and metabolism of the microbiota, thereby stimulating the production of CCK from the EECs possibly in response to propionate.-Zhang, X., Grosfeld, A., Williams, E., Vasiliauskas, D., Barretto, S., Smith, L., Mariadassou, M., Philippe, C., Devime, F., Melchior, C., Gourcerol, G., Dourmap, N., Lapaque, N., Larraufie, P., Blottière, H. M., Herberden, C., Gerard, P., Rehfeld, J. F., Ferraris, R. P., Fritton, J. C., Ellero-Simatos, S., Douard, V. Fructose malabsorption induces cholecystokinin expression in the ileum and cecum by changing microbiota composition and metabolism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6988857PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1096/fj.201801526RRDOI Listing

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