AI Article Synopsis

  • Microbial colonization of the neonatal gut is essential for immune system development, with human milk being the optimal nutrition due to its prebiotic and probiotic properties.
  • When exclusive breastfeeding isn’t an option, infant formula with probiotics can help support microbiome development, but understanding how different formula components affect specific probiotic strains is limited.
  • A study examined how different protein forms (intact vs. extensively hydrolyzed) in infant formula influenced the metabolic activity of two probiotics using a model of infant gut microbiota, finding that both protein types supported metabolic activity, but with variations depending on the probiotic strain.

Article Abstract

Microbial colonization of the neonatal gut is pivotal in priming the infant's immune system. Human milk (HM) is the best nutrition for infants and supports the development of the microbiota due to prebiotic compounds and probiotic microorganisms. When exclusive breastfeeding is not possible, infant formula (IF) with probiotics is a strategy to support the infant's microbiome development. However, knowledge about the effects of the infant gut microbiota and different compounds in IF on individual probiotic strains is limited, as strain-level detection in a complex ecosystem is challenging. The aim of the present study was to show the effects of IF with different protein forms on the metabolic activity of two probiotic strains isolated from HM in a complex ecosystem. By using an infant gut model containing infant donor-microbiota, the effects of IF with either intact or extensively hydrolyzed protein on the metabolic activity of the donor microbiota, as well as two probiotic strains [ () CECT 5716 (Lf) and () DSM 32583 (Bb)], were analyzed. A new bioinformatic pipeline combined with a specific infant microbiome database was used to explore shotgun metagenome datasets (1200 Megabases) for taxonomic identification and strain-level tracking. Both protein forms (i.e., intact or extensively hydrolyzed protein) in IF supported infant gut microbial metabolic activity equally, as evidenced by similar levels of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs). Interestingly, gut microbial metabolic activity was found to be differently activated in a strain-dependent manner. Taxonomic profiling of the microbiome at the strain level enabled monitoring of the prevalence and abundance of both probiotic strains, even in a complex ecosystem. Food matrix and host microbiota interactions should be considered when evaluating strain-specific probiotic effects in the future.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11480727PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.20517/mrr.2024.13DOI Listing

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