Dietary impact of a plant-derived microRNA on the gut microbiome.

ExRNA

Pediatrics-Nutrition, Children's Nutrition Research, Baylor College of Medicine, 1100 Bates Ave, Houston, TX 77030, USA.

Published: August 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • * Researchers maintained miR-146a-deficient mice on a standard diet before switching them to either a control or miR-146a-expressing plant diet for 21 days, analyzing the changes in their gut microbiomes.
  • * Results indicated that a plant-based diet causes significant changes in gut microbial diversity, but incorporating miR-146a from transgenic plants only slightly modifies the microbiome without major structural effects.

Article Abstract

Background: Global estimations of 4 billion people living on plant-based diets signify tremendous diversity in plant consumption and their assorted miRNAs, which presents a challenging model to experimentally address how plant-based miRNAs impact the microbiome. Here we establish baseline gut microbiome composition for a mouse model deficient in the specific mammalian miR-146a shown to alter gut microbiomes. We then asses the effect on the gut microbiome when miR-146a-deficient mice are fed a transgenic plant-based diet expressing the murine-derived miR-146a. Mice deficient in miR-146a were maintained either on a baseline diet until 7 weeks of age (day 0) and then fed either vector or miR-146a-expressing plant-based diets for 21 days. The gut microbiomes of mice were examined by comparing the V4 region of 16S rRNA gene sequences of DNA isolated from fecal samples at days 0 (baseline diet) and 21 (vector or miR-146a expressing plant-based diets).

Results: Beta-diversity analysis demonstrated that the transition from baseline chow to a plant-based diet resulted in significant longitudinal shifts in microbial community structure attributable to increased fiber intake. Bipartite network analysis suggests that miR-146a-deficient mice fed a plant diet rich in miR-146a have a microbiome population modestly different than mice fed an isogenic control plant diet deficient in miR-146a.

Conclusion: A mouse diet composed of a transgenic plant expressing a mouse miR-146a may fine tune microbial communities but does not appear to have global effects on microbiome structure and composition.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7856875PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s41544-020-00053-2DOI Listing

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