Our previous studies have elucidated that oral administration of L. extract, known as Nozawana in Japan, alters immune responses and gut microbiota composition, increasing the numbers of butyrate-producing bacteria. Therefore, further investigation would help elucidate the mechanism attributable for the changes and health-promoting effects observed after L. extract ingestion. To reveal the modulation effects of fermented L. on immune function and intestinal bacterial community structure, we conducted an intervention study with healthy volunteers followed by a mouse feeding study. The pilot intervention study was conducted for healthy volunteers aged 40-64 years under the hypothesis that the number of subjects exhibiting any change in gut microbiota in response to fermented L. consumption may be limited. In total, 20 volunteers consumed 30 g of fermented L. per day for 4 weeks. The fecal bacterial community composition of the volunteers was characterized using terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphism patterning followed by clustering analysis. To evaluate the detailed changes in the immune responses and the gut bacterial composition, assessed by high-throughput sequencing, we fed healthy mice with freeze-dried, fermented L. for 2 weeks. The fecal bacterial community composition of the volunteers before the intervention was divided into three clades. Regardless of the clade, the defecation frequency significantly increased during the intervention weeks compared with that before the intervention. However, this clustering detected a specific increase of in one cluster (low to zero and high occupation of at clusters IV and XIVa) post-ingestion. The cytokine production of spleen cells significantly increased due to feeding fermented L. to the mice. This supplementary in vivo trial provided comparable results to the volunteer study regarding the effects of ingestion of the material given the compositional change complying with that of dietary fiber, particularly in the increase of genera , , and genera in the family, and the increase in daily defecation amount during 2 weeks of administration. We conclude that feeding fermented L. may be responsible for the observed modulation in gut microbiota to increase fiber-degrading bacteria and butyrate-producing bacteria which may be relevant to the improvement in bowel function such as defecation frequency.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8227684PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13061847DOI Listing

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