Literature DB >> 10702589

In vitro fermentation of swine ileal digesta containing oat bran dietary fiber by rat cecal inocula adapted to the test fiber increases propionate production but fermentation of wheat bran ileal digesta does not produce more butyrate.

D J Monsma1, P T Thorsen, N W Vollendorf, T D Crenshaw, J A Marlett.   

Abstract

This experiment evaluated three hypotheses: i) production of propionate is increased during fermentation of substrate containing oat bran (OB)(6); ii) production of butyrate is increased during fermentation of substrate containing wheat bran (WB) and iii) results of in vitro fermentations using physiological substrates and inocula agree with in vivo data. Ileal digesta collected from swine fed OB and WB were the substrates. Digesta was fermented for 0-96 h in an anaerobic in vitro system using inocula prepared from ceca of rats fed the same fiber sources. Carbohydrate and short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) contents in the fermentations were measured by gas chromatography. Fermentation of WB digesta did not produce more n-butyrate (P > 0.05) and was significantly slower (P < 0.05) than fermentation of OB digesta. OB digesta fermentation produced a significantly greater (P < 0.05) molar proportion of SCFA as propionate. Bacterial mass increased more and was maintained longer during fermentation of OB digesta than the WB digesta. Our results indicate that dilution of undigested WB fiber and not n-butyrate production is one mechanism by which WB may protect colonic mucosa; propionate production is increased during fermentation of beta-glucan in OB; and an in vitro system using physiological sources of inoculum and substrate containing WB and OB yields results that agree with in vivo findings in humans and rats.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10702589     DOI: 10.1093/jn/130.3.585

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nutr        ISSN: 0022-3166            Impact factor:   4.798


  2 in total

1.  Different Oat Ingredients Stimulate Specific Microbial Metabolites in the Gut Microbiome of Three Human Individuals in Vitro.

Authors:  Pieter Van den Abbeele; Alison Kamil; Lisa Fleige; Yongsoo Chung; Peter De Chavez; Massimo Marzorati
Journal:  ACS Omega       Date:  2018-10-02

2.  Intrauterine growth restriction alters nutrient metabolism in the intestine of porcine offspring.

Authors:  Tiantian Li; Shimeng Huang; Long Lei; Shiyu Tao; Yi Xiong; Guoyao Wu; Jie Hu; Xiongkun Yuan; Shengjun Zhao; Bin Zuo; Hongjian Yang; Yingping Xiao; Gang Lin; Junjun Wang
Journal:  J Anim Sci Biotechnol       Date:  2021-02-08
  2 in total

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