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Consistent Prebiotic Effects of Carrot RG-I on the Gut Microbiota of Four Human Adult Donors in the SHIME Model despite Baseline Individual Variability. | LitMetric

The human gut microbiome is currently recognized to play a vital role in human biology and development, with diet as a major modulator. Therefore, novel indigestible polysaccharides that confer a health benefit upon their fermentation by the microbiome are under investigation. Based on the recently demonstrated prebiotic potential of a carrot-derived pectin extract enriched for rhamnogalacturonan I (cRG-I), the current study aimed to assess the impact of cRG-I upon repeated administration using the M-SHIME technology (3 weeks at 3g cRG-I/d). Consistent effects across four simulated adult donors included enhanced levels of acetate (+21.1 mM), propionate (+17.6 mM), and to a lesser extent butyrate (+4.1 mM), coinciding with a marked increase of OTUs related to and species with versatile enzymatic potential likely allowing them to serve as primary degraders of cRG-I. These members are able to produce succinate, explaining the consistent increase of an OTU related to the succinate-converting (+0.47 log(cells/mL)). While the family remained unaffected, a specific OTU related to increased significantly upon cRG-I treatment (+1.32 log(cells/mL)). Additional monoculture experiments suggested that species are unable to ferment cRG-I structures as such and that probably feeds on arabinan and galactan side chains of cRG-I, released by aforementioned members. Overall, this study confirms the prebiotic potential of cRG-I and additionally highlights the marked consistency of the microbial changes observed across simulated subjects, suggesting the involvement of a specialized consortium in cRG-I fermentation by the human gut microbiome.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8538933PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9102142DOI Listing

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