Raw potato starch alters the microbiome, colon and cecal gene expression, and resistance to infection in mice fed a Western diet.

Front Nutr

Diet, Genomics, and Immunology Laboratory, United States Department of Agriculture, Beltsville Human Nutrition Research Center, Agricultural Research Service, Beltsville, MD, United States.

Published: January 2023

Resistant starches (RS) are fermented in the cecum and colon to produce short-chain fatty acids and other microbial metabolites that can alter host physiology and the composition of the microbiome. We previously showed that mice fed a Total Western Diet (TWD) based on NHANES data that mimics the composition of a typical American diet, containing resistant potato starch (RPS), produced concentration dependent changes to the cecal short-chain fatty acids, the microbiome composition as well as gene expression changes in the cecum and colon that were most prevalent in mice fed the 10% RPS diet. We were then interested in whether feeding TWD/RPS would alter the resistance to bacterial-induced colitis caused by (), a mouse pathogen that shares 66.7% of encoded genes with . Mice were fed the TWD for 6 weeks followed by a 3-weeks on the RPS diets before infecting with . Fecal excretion was monitored over time and fecal samples were collected for 16S sequencing. Mice were euthanized on day 12 post-infection and cecal contents collected for 16S sequencing. Cecum and colon tissues were obtained for gene expression analysis, histology and to determine the level of mucosa-associated . Feeding RPS increased the percentage of mice productively infected by and fecal excretion on day 4 post-infection. Mice fed the TWD/10% RPS diet also had greater colonization of colonic tissue at day 12 post-infection and colonic pathology. Both diet and infection altered the fecal and cecal microbiome composition with increased levels of RPS resulting in decreased α-diversity that was partially reversed by infection. RNASeq analysis identified several mechanistic pathways that could be associated with the increased colonization of -infected mice fed 10% RPS. In the distal colon we found a decrease in enrichment for genes associated with T cells, B cells, genes associated with the synthesis of DHA-derived SPMs and VA metabolism/retinoic acid signaling. We also found an increase in the expression of the potentially immunosuppressive gene, Ido1. These results suggest that high-level consumption of RPS in the context of a typical American diet, may alter susceptibility to gastrointestinal bacterial infections.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9871501PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2022.1057318DOI Listing

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