| Literature DB >> 29053599 |
Barbara A Williams1, Lucas J Grant2, Michael J Gidley3, Deirdre Mikkelsen4.
Abstract
The majority of dietary fibre (DF) originates from plant cell walls. Chemically, DF mostly comprise carbohydrate polymers, which resist hydrolysis by digestive enzymes in the mammalian small intestine, but can be fermented by large intestinal bacteria. One of the main benefits of DF relate to its fermentability, which affects microbial diversity and function within the gastro-intestinal tract (GIT), as well as the by-products of the fermentation process. Much work examining DF tends to focus on various purified ingredients, which have been extracted from plants. Increasingly, the validity of this is being questioned in terms of human nutrition, as there is evidence to suggest that it is the actual complexity of DF which affects the complexity of the GIT microbiota. Here, we review the literature comparing results of fermentation of purified DF substrates, with whole plant foods. There are strong indications that the more complex and varied the diet (and its ingredients), the more complex and varied the GIT microbiota is likely to be. Therefore, it is proposed that as the DF fermentability resulting from this complex microbial population has such profound effects on human health in relation to diet, it would be appropriate to include DF fermentability in its characterization-a functional approach of immediate relevance to nutrition.Entities:
Keywords: cereals; fruit; large intestinal fermentation; microbiota; plant cell walls; polyphenols; short-chain fatty acids; vegetables
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29053599 PMCID: PMC5666883 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18102203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic depiction of key soluble and insoluble dietary fibre structures which form the chemical components comprising the plant cell wall. The backbone structures for cellulose, mixed-linkage glucans, xyloglucan and arabinoxylan are (1,4)-β-linked, while the backbone of pectin is comprised of (1,4)-α-linked chains of galacturonosyl residues. In the pectin structure, the left hand part containing alternating rhamnose and galacturonic acid in the backbone is rhamnogalacturonan I, the middle section without long branches is homogalacturonan, and the right hand section with complex multi-sugar branches is rhamnogalacturonan II. Chain aggregation is prevented for xyloglucan, arabinoxylan and pectic non-cellulosic wall polysaccharides, due to the presence of short oligosaccharide-, monosaccharide- or acetyl group side chains. For mixed-linkage glucans, on the other hand, it is the irregular conformation of this polysaccharide which prevents main chain aggregation (Adapted from Burton et al., 2010 [50]).
Figure 2Basic structure of (A). Some of the simplest phenols and flavonoids (adapted from Khoddami, Wilkes et al., 2013 [68]), and (B). The common classes of polyphenols found in fruits and vegetables (adapted from Singh et al., 2011 [69]).
Biological actions of lactic and succinic acids and the predominant short chain fatty acids produced by bacteria in the GIT. Table adapted from [109] with data sourced from [137,138,139,140].
| Lactic | Succinic | Acetic | Propionic | Butyric | Mode of Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| √ | √ | Source of energy (brain, heart, muscle) | |||
| √ | Energy for colonocytes | ||||
| √ | √ | √ | √ | Reduce GIT pH | |
| √ | √ | √ | √ | Decreases NH3 absorption across epithelium | |
| √ | √ | √ | √ | Decreases growth of potential pathogens | |
| √ | Inhibits proliferation and induces apoptosis of cancerous cells | ||||
| √ | √ | Lipid Metabolism | |||
| √ | √ | √ | Increased leptin production (increased satiety) | ||
| Involvement in bacterial cross-feeding |
Studies involving various purified DF and the effect on human GIT microbiota.
| Purified Ingredient | Methodology Used | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Polydextrose Soluble maize fibre | 454 pyrosequencing of bacterial 16S rRNA genes (V4–V6 region) | Consumption of these fibres led to an increased abundance of faecal Clostridiaceae, Veillonellaceae, Faecalibacterium, Phascolarctobacterium, Dialister and lower Eubacteriaceae | [ |
| Maize, Dextrin, Pullulan, Resistant starch (RS) | Micro-array analysis | All tested substrates except RS reduced species of the Bacteroides group, and increased Bifidobacteria | [ |
| Aloe vera gel (extract and powder), Larch, | Real-time PCR analysis of species of interest | Increased | [ |
| Amylose, amylopectin, dextran, xylan, polygalacturonate, pectin | Culture analysis of 10 | Identified the polysaccharide preference (of the tested substrates) for fermentation by specific bacterial species. Most capable of plant polysaccharide fermentation | [ |
| Apple pectin | Faeces were collected for culturing analysis of bacterial populations | Significant increase in | [ |
| High amylase maize starch | Fluorescence in situ hybridisation | [ |
Studies involving various whole plant-based food products and the effect on GIT microbiota of humans and animals.
| Source of Bacteria | Ingredients | Methodology Used | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human faeces | Kiwifruit | In vitro batch culture fermentation, 454 pyrosequencing (V2–V3 region) | [ | |
| Human faeces | High flavonoid whole-foods | Total bacterial counts by fluorescence in situ hybridisation | Flavonoid content of whole-foods led to a decreased abundance of potentially pathogenic bacteria, as per relationship to cardiovascular disorders | [ |
| Human faeces | Dates | Bacteria enumeration via fluorescent in situ hybridisation | No significant differences of microbiota between diets reported | [ |
| Swine in vivo digesta | Alfalfa & citrus pulp | Bacterial culturing for counts | No difference in bacterial counts reported between diets | [ |
| Swine faeces | Wheat, wheat bran | Faecal microbiota analysis using qPCR, DNA fingerprinting, metaproteomics | Lactobacilli, bifidobacteria and | [ |
| Ground maize, Wheat bran | Real-time PCR to analyse populations of | No long-term differences for | [ | |
| Swine faeces | Sugar beet pulp, Soybean hulls | Faeces collected for culturing and bacterial counts (log10 CFU/g) | Reported that DF did not affect the composition of the bacterial population cultured from faeces | [ |
Figure 3A comparison of in vitro fermentability of arabinoxylan as a pure dietary fibre component versus wheat bran, showing differences in the cumulative gas volumes over time for each substrate, with arabinoxylan readily fermented compared to the more complex wheat bran dietary fibre (Adapted from Williams et al., 2011) [33].