| Literature DB >> 31149336 |
Barbara A Williams1, Deirdre Mikkelsen1, Bernadine M Flanagan1, Michael J Gidley1.
Abstract
This review describes dietary fibres originating from a range of foods, particularly in relation to their plant cell walls. It explores the categorization of dietary fibres into "soluble" or "insoluble". It also emphasizes dietary fibre fermentability, in terms of describing how the gastro-intestinal tract (GIT) microbiota respond to a selection of fibres from these categories. Food is categorized into cereals, legumes, fruits and vegetables. Mention is also made of example whole foods and why differences in physico-chemical characteristics between "purified" and "non-purified" food components are important in terms of health. Lastly, recommendations are made as to how dietary fibre could be classified differently, in relation to its functionality in terms of fermentability, rather than only its solubility.Entities:
Keywords: Cereal grains; Dietary fibre; Fruits; Large intestinal fermentation; Legumes; Microbial activity; Microbiota; Plant cell walls; Short-chain fatty acids; Vegetables
Year: 2019 PMID: 31149336 PMCID: PMC6537190 DOI: 10.1186/s40104-019-0350-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anim Sci Biotechnol ISSN: 1674-9782
Dietary fibre- physico-chemical characteristics and relationships to gut effects (modified from [9])
| DF characteristic | GIT effect | Systemic effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Water-holding capacity & viscosity | Slows gastric emptying; Changes digesta mixing; Alteration of digestive enzyme activity; Stimulates passage rate; | Slows digestion, especially of protein and lipids; Associated with reduced plasma cholesterol; Blunting of glycaemic response | [ |
| Bulking | Gastric distension; Changes in mixing & diffusion; | Decrease food intake; | [ |
| Adsorption of compounds (e.g. bile salts, polyphenols & minerals) | Increases bile acid excretion & other compounds; Retention of polyphenols until large intestine; | Blood cholesterol; fermentation of polyphenols; | [ |
| Encapsulation | Plant cell walls encapsulate e.g. starch granules; | Transport of starch (resistant) to LI for fermentation; | [ |
| Fermentability | Increases microbial biomass & fermentation end-products (e.g. SCFA); Induces selection of specific microbes; | Energy for colonocytes; influences satiety; faecal bulking; “colonization resistance” to pathogens; | [ |
Structural composition of different dietary fibres (note- “soluble” may indicate “partially soluble” (modified from [9])
| DF | Solubility | Main unit | Branch units | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cellulose | Insoluble | β- (1,4) Glucose | – | [ |
| Lignin | Insoluble | Polyphenols | Polyphenols | [ |
| Resistant starches | Insoluble | Helical amylose | 1,6 glucose in amylopectin | [ |
| Mix-linkage glucans | Soluble | β- (1,3) glucose | – | [ |
| β- (1,4) glucose | – | |||
Hemicelluloses Arabinoxylan Xyloglucan Galactomannans | Soluble Soluble Soluble | Xylose Glucose Mannose | Arabinose Xylose Galactose Glucose | [ |
| Pectins | Soluble | Galacturonic acid with methoxy groups | Arabinose Galactose | [ |
Gums Guar Agar | Soluble Soluble | β −1,4-linked mannose | Galactose - | [ |
Non-digestible oligosaccharides Fructooligosaccharide Galactooligosaccharide | Soluble Soluble | Galactose, with terminal glucose unit. | - - | [ |
Dietary fibre content of selected fruits and vegetables (modified from NUTTAB, Food Standards Agency Australiaa)
| Fruits | Total DF, g/100g dry matter | Vegetables | Total DF, g/100g dry matter |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apple, with peel | 16.7 | Beetroot | 26.7 |
| Cavendish banana | 10.1 | Broccoli | 34.0 |
| Cherries | 8.7 | Cabbage, white | 30.0 |
| Grapefruit | 14.5 | Carrot | 34.2 |
| Mango | 9.4 | Celery | 29.4 |
| Orange | 18.0 | Cucumber | 15.8 |
| Peach | 16.1 | Iceberg lettuce | 33.3 |
| Pear | 21.2 | Sweetcorn | 22.0 |
| Pineapple | 13.6 | Tomato | 20.7 |
| Strawberry | 31.6 | Zucchini | 23.1 |
| Watermelon | 6.4 |
aData from Food Standards Agency Australia NUTTAB Release 2010, Last accessed April 19, 2019 from: http://www.foodstandards.gov.au/science/monitoringnutrients/nutrientables/nuttab/Pages/default.aspx
Dietary fibre content of selected cereals & legumes (modified from NUTTAB, Food Standards Agency Australiaa)
| Cereals | Total DF, g/100g dry matter | Legumes | Total DF, g/100g dry matter |
|---|---|---|---|
| Barley, pearled, raw | 11.7 | Haricot beans | 20.8 |
| Millet, raw | 9.3 | Lentils | 15.3 |
| Oats, rolled | 9.5 | Lima beans | 19.6 |
| Rice | 3.2 | Peas, green, raw | 25.6 |
| Wheat flour, wholemeal | 11.3 | Red kidney beans | 21.5 |
| Soybeans | 20.1 |
aData from Food Standards Agency Australia NUTTAB Release 2010, Last accessed April 19, 2019 from: http://www.foodstandards.gov.au/science/monitoringnutrients/nutrientables/nuttab/Pages/default.aspx
Fig. 1Caecal bacterial proportional counts (%) of probe versus diet as observed using FISH. The diets tested were LM-AX (Low meat- no added arabinoxylan; LM + AX- low meat with added AX; HM-AX- high meat no added AX; HM + AX- high meat with added AX, as described previously [22]. * indicates a significant change (P < 0.05) in the proportion of bacteria observed using the stated probe as a result of the introduction of AX to the diet, as calculated using a non-parametric Mann-Whitney test. 1 targets 64% of the order Bacteroidales; 2 targets most members of the genus Tannerella and the genus Prevotella of the class Bacteriodetes; 3 targets most of the Clostridium histolyticum group (Clostridium cluster I and II); 4 targets most of the Clostridium coccoides-Eubacterium rectale group (Clostridium cluster XIVa and XIVb); 5 targets
Fig. 213C CP/MAS NMR of onion, carrot and apple cell walls. All spectra are from samples with added water. The region from 95 to 110 ppm is the most diagnostic for polysaccharides as this is the region where the anomeric carbons (C-1) are seen. The peak at 105 ppm is typical of cellulose and the shoulder at 99 ppm is expected for C-1 of galacturonic acid. The presence of cellulose is also clear from the C-4 peak at 90 ppm. The fact that otherwise soluble galacturonic acid from pectin can be seen in the CP/MAS (‘solid state’) spectrum of wet cell walls, suggests that the pectin is bound to cellulose rendering it insoluble
Fig. 313C CP/MAS NMR spectra of cooked sorghum at early, mid- and late stages of in vitro fermentation. The spectrum of cooked sorghum is dominated by starch. The anomeric carbon (C-1 region) from 90 to 105 ppm is used to calculate the starch molecular order