| Literature DB >> 33684031 |
Darryl A Wesener1,2, Zachary W Beller1,2, Samantha L Peters3, Amir Rajabi4, Gianluca Dimartino4, Richard J Giannone3, Robert L Hettich3, Jeffrey I Gordon1,2.
Abstract
Methods for measuring gut microbiota biochemical activities in vivo are needed to characterize its functional states in health and disease. To illustrate one approach, an arabinan-containing polysaccharide was isolated from pea fiber, its structure defined, and forward genetic and proteomic analyses used to compare its effects, versus unfractionated pea fiber and sugar beet arabinan, on a human gut bacterial strain consortium in gnotobiotic mice. We produced 'Microbiota Functional Activity Biosensors' (MFABs) consisting of glycans covalently linked to the surface of fluorescent paramagnetic microscopic glass beads. Three MFABs, each containing a unique glycan/fluorophore combination, were simultaneously orally gavaged into gnotobiotic mice, recovered from their intestines, and analyzed to directly quantify bacterial metabolism of structurally distinct arabinans in different human diet contexts. Colocalizing pea-fiber arabinan and another polysaccharide (glucomannan) on the bead surface enhanced in vivo degradation of glucomannan. MFABs represent a potentially versatile platform for developing new prebiotics and more nutritious foods.Entities:
Keywords: bead-based metabolic biosensors; bioconjugate chemistry; food science; human gut microbiome; infectious disease; microbiology; polysaccharide structure; prebiotic discovery; utilization
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33684031 PMCID: PMC7939548 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.64478
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140