| Literature DB >> 32545663 |
Aroa Lopez-Santamarina1, Alicia Del Carmen Mondragon1, Alexandre Lamas1, Jose Manuel Miranda1, Carlos Manuel Franco1, Alberto Cepeda1.
Abstract
The human gut microbiota has been revealed in recent years as a factor that plays a decisive role in the maintenance of human health, as well as in the development of many non-communicable diseases. This microbiota can be modulated by various dietary factors, among which complex carbohydrates have a great influence. Although most complex carbohydrates included in the human diet come from vegetables, there are also options to include complex carbohydrates from non-vegetable sources, such as chitin and its derivatives. Chitin, and its derivatives such as chitosan can be obtained from non-vegetable sources, the best being insects, crustacean exoskeletons and fungi. The present review offers a broad perspective of the current knowledge surrounding the impacts of chitin and its derived polysaccharides on the human gut microbiota and the profound need for more in-depth investigations into this topic. Overall, the effects of whole insects or meal on the gut microbiota have contradictory results, possibly due to their high protein content. Better results are obtained for the case of chitin derivatives, regarding both metabolic effects and effects on the gut microbiota composition.Entities:
Keywords: chitin; chitosan; crustacean; gut microbiota; insect; polysaccharides; prebiotic
Year: 2020 PMID: 32545663 PMCID: PMC7353569 DOI: 10.3390/foods9060782
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Effects of administration of whole insects or insect flour on gut microbiota.
| Type of Study | Insect | Dosage and Time of Administration | Significant Changes in Gut Microbiota | Significant Changes in Metabolites and Metabolic Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| In vitro trial using 24 Lohmann brown classic laying hens | According to Marodo et al. (2017). Hens ingested around 1.02 g/day of chitin throughout the trial (21 weeks) | Increased GM diversity and richness, and increased proportions of | Increase in SCFA production, and lower triglyceride content in serum and cholesterol content in serum and egg yolks | [ | |
| In vivo using 20 healthy adults | 14 days of eating prepared study breakfast meals that included cricket powder (25 g/day) or control | Acetate in the stool was reduced by an estimated 2.31 µM/g during the cricket diet. Similarly, cricket consumption was also associated with reduced propionate content | [ | ||
| In vivo trial in rainbow trout ( | 10%, 20% and 30% partial substitution of fish meal with insect meal for 12 weeks | Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria phyla were increased after inclusion of insect meal in the diet. An increase in richness, diversity and lactic acid- and butyrate-producing bacteria was also observed | Not provided | [ | |
| In vitro fermentation system using fresh fecal samples from 5 healthy donors | 1% ( | Increase of Bacteroidaceae and Prevotellaceae, but not | Ammonia production was, within concentration levels, considered not cytotoxic. Increased production of acetate and propionate, that are associated with promotion of satiety | [ | |
| In vivo trial using 256 broiler chickens | Partially defatted | 5%, 10% or 15% meal in feed for 35 days | Increase in GM diversity in broilers supplemented with 5% and 10% | Decrease in villi mucin production in broilers supplemented with 10% and 15% | [ |
| In vivo trial using 104 Lohmann Brown classic laying hens | 24 to 45 weeks | Not provided | Better feed conversion ratio but lower lay percentage, feed intake and egg weight. Lower cholesterol and triglycerides in eggs and higher calcium levels in blood were obtained in hens supplemented with | [ | |
| In vivo using 600 Roos 308 1-day-old broilers | Feed enriched with insect meal according to the following experimental system: 0.2% | Dietary insects significantly decreased the cecal counts of | Addition of | [ | |
| In vivo using zebrafish ( |
| Two different | Enterobacteriaceae counts in samples from fish fed both types of feed containing | Not provided | [ |
| In vivo using 180 juvenile Siberian sturgeon ( | Diets were prepared by replacing fishmeal in the control diet with 15% | The | The | [ | |
| In vivo using 42 specific-pathogen-free mice | 3-week-old stable fly larvae | Normal control group ( | Cecal microbial sequencing showed a significant difference in the prevalence of Firmicutes, | Metabolites derived from stable fly are rich in amino acids that may affect intestinal health by regulating intestinal immunity, antioxidant capacity and microbial population in mice with diarrhea | [ |
CFU: Colony formit units; GM: Gut microbiota; SCFA: Short Chain Fatty acids.
Effect of chitin derivatives on the gut microbiota different species.
| Type of Study | Insect/Crustacean, Dosage and Time of Exposure | Characterization | Significant Changes in Gut Microbiota | Significant Changes in Metabolites and Metabolic Effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| In vitro determination of bacteria grown in tryptone soy broth comparing | Chitin was tested at concentrations of 5 and 1 g/L, whereas COS was tested at concentrations of 5, 1, and 0.5 g/L | COS powder ≤ 1.5 kDa and degree of deacetylation ≥ 90%. Chitin was prepared at a concentration in the range 1–5 g/L. COS was prepared in the range 0.5–5 g/L | COS reduced the growth of | Not provided | [ |
| In vitro determination of minimal inhibitory concentrations against | Minimal inhibitory concentrations were tested in the range 0–0.6% | Chitosan with average molecular weights of 628, 591 and 107 kDa and a degree of deacetylation in the range 80–85%. COS with molecular weight of < 5 and < 3 kDa and a degree of deacetylation in the range 80–85% | COS showed higher antibacterial activity than chitosan against | Not provided | [ |
| In vivo trial using 24 C57BL/6J mice | 1 mg/mL in water, about 200 mg/kg/day for 3 months | COS < 1 kDa with deacetylation degree of 88% | Significant decrease in Firmicutes phylum and increase in Bacteroidetes phylum in dp/dp mice. At genus level, markedly reduced Lachnospiraceae NK4A136 group, | Lower fasting glucose, better insulin tolerance. Reduced weight of white fat tissue. Significant decrease in mRNA levels of inflammation markers such as TNF-α, MCP-1 and macrophage biomarker CD11c | [ |
| In vivo trial using adult zebrafish ( | 2% of zebrafish diet for 60 days | Chitosan–silver nanocomposites | Increase of Bacteroidetes, Fusobacteria and unassigned other phylum, whereas Proteobacteria decreased | Increase in goblet cell density and in villi height. Genes of IL-6 and 12 showed significantly higher regulation, whereas mucin-encoding genes, such as Muc 5.1 and Muc 2.1 showed upregulation in treated fish | [ |
| In vivo trial using 144 piglets (Duroc × landrace × Yorkshire) | 100, 200 or 400 mg/kg in feed for 28 days | Chitosan nanoparticles with a particle size of about 50 nm, average molecular weight of 220 kDa and degree of deacetylation of 95% | Increase in GM diversity and | Improvement in growth performance. Improvement in immunoglobulin IgA, IgG, C3 and C4. Decrease in plasma cortisol, PEG2, IL-6 and IL-1ß | [ |
| In vitro trial investigating effects on growth of 100 | In vitro trial at 0.5% GC | GC was obtained from | Increase of | Decrease in body weight gain with respect to controls | [ |
| In vivo trial using 20 C57BL/6J mice | 1 mg/mL chitin oligosaccharide (NACOS) in drinking water (about 200 mg/kg/day) for 5 months in a high-fat diet | NACOS with a polymerization degree 2–6 | Increase of | Decrease in mRNA of cytokines, including TNF-α, IL-6, MCP-1 and LPS in serum. Improved bacterial motility, oxidative stress, energy metabolism and inflammation process | [ |
| In vivo using 130 subjects free of diabetes mellitus | Participants were randomly assigned to receive chitin–glucan (GC) (4.5 g/day; | GC derived from | Not provided | Administration of 4.5 g/day GC for 6 weeks significantly reduced oxidized low-density lipoprotein. At the end of the study, GC was associated with lower LDL-C levels, although this difference was statistically significant only for the GC 1.5 g/day group | [ |
| In vitro trial using trypticase phyton yeast inoculated with different | 0.025%, 0.1% and 0.5% low-molar-mass chitosan, chitosan succinate; chitosan glutamate and 0.1% and 0.5% COS in anerobic trypticase phyton yeast medium | Chitosan molecular weight 75 kDa; degree of deacetylation 83%, prepared by enzyme hydrolysis to obtain different fractions | Both chitosan and all derivatives inhibited | Not provided | [ |
| In vitro fermentation using fresh feces of C57BL/6J mice | 1 g/L of COS in drinking water, about 200 mg/kg/day for 5 months | COS with deacetylation degree over 95% and average molecular weight < 1 kDa | Increase of Bacteroidetes and Verrucomicrobia phyla whereas Proteobacteria and Firmicutes phyla decreased | Increase in colonic H2, acetate and butyrate | [ |
| In vivo using 24 C57BL/6J mice | GC (10% | GC was derived from the cell walls of the mycelium of | GC supplementation increased the quantities of | GC decreased body weight gain by about 28% as compared to high-fat diet. This effect was accompanied by lower fat mass development. Consumption of GC showed potential beneficial effects with respect to the development of obesity and associated metabolic disorders such as diabetes and hepatic steatosis | [ |
| In vivo trial using 40 male Sprague-Dawley rats | COS (0.3 g/day), resistant starch (1.2 g/day) and COS combined with resistant starch (1.5 g/day) slurried with drinking water for 6 weeks | COS with an average molecular weight about 5 kDa and a deacetylation degree of 83% | COS increased Bacteroidetes and decreased Firmicutes. COS combined with resistant starch | COS combined with resistant starch decreased protein-fermentation markers such as H2S2, ammonia, phenols and indole. It also increased excretion of bile acids in feces, the thickness of the mucosal layer and SCFA production | [ |
| In vivo using 12 Wistar rats | Control group received pellets with commercial diet ST-1. Treated group pellets had chitosan or COS added at a final concentration of 10 g/kg in feed mixture) for 4 weeks | COS obtained by cellulase hydrolysis of chitosan from | Increase of total bacterial population in the group of | Not provided | [ |
| In vivo trial using 40 pigs | Basal diet plus 1000 µg/kg chitosan for 63 days | Chitosan obtained from prawn ( | Chitosan supplementation decreased Firmicutes in the colon and decreased | Reduced feed intake and body weight in pigs | [ |
| In vivo trial using 24 Syrian golden hamsters with dyslipidemia previously induced with high-fat diet | 150 mg/kg/day for 8 weeks | Chitosan with degree of diacylation higher than 85% combined to | Increase of | Triglycerides, total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and aspartate aminotransferase were reduced in the serum of hamsters fed chitosan-added diet | [ |
| In vivo trial using 60 pigs | Basal diet with 50 g/Tm added for 28 days | Low molecular weight chitosan | Increase in Bacteroidetes, decrease in Firmicutes. Increase in | Chitosan supplementation improved metabolic pathways including energy metabolism, metabolism of terpenoids and polyketides, digestive systems, cell growth and death, glycan biosynthesis and metabolism as well as metabolism of cofactors and vitamins | [ |
GC: Chitin-glucan; IL-1: Interleukin 1; IL-6: Interleukin 6; IgA: Inmunoglobulin A; IgG: Inmunoglobulin G; LDL-C: low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; LPS: lipopolysaccharide; MCP-1: monocyte chemoattractant protein-1; NACOS: chitin oligosaccharide; mRNA: messenger RNA; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor alpha; SCFA: Short chain fatty acids; PEG2: Prostaglandin E-2.