| Literature DB >> 35565693 |
Saurabh Kadyan1, Aditya Sharma1, Bahram H Arjmandi1, Prashant Singh1, Ravinder Nagpal1.
Abstract
Dietary pulses, including dry beans, lentils, chickpeas, and dry peas, have the highest proportion of fiber among different legume cultivars and are inexpensive, easily accessible, and have a long shelf-life. The inclusion of pulses in regular dietary patterns is an easy and effective solution for achieving recommended fiber intake and maintaining a healthier gut and overall health. Dietary pulses-derived resistant starch (RS) is a relatively less explored prebiotic ingredient. Several in vitro and preclinical studies have elucidated the crucial role of RS in fostering and shaping the gut microbiota composition towards homeostasis thereby improving host metabolic health. However, in humans and aged animal models, the effect of only the cereals and tubers derived RS has been studied. In this context, this review collates literature pertaining to the beneficial effects of dietary pulses and their RS on gut microbiome-metabolome signatures in preclinical and clinical studies while contemplating their potential and prospects for better aging-associated gut health. In a nutshell, the incorporation of dietary pulses and their RS in diet fosters the growth of beneficial gut bacteria and significantly enhances the production of short-chain fatty acids in the colon.Entities:
Keywords: aging; beans; fiber; gut health; lentils; microbiome; microbiota; prebiotic; pulses; resistant starch
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35565693 PMCID: PMC9100130 DOI: 10.3390/nu14091726
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 6.706
Figure 1Illustration depicting the effects of resistant starches (RS) derived from dietary beans and pulses on host (rodent and human) health. ↑: increased; ↓: decreased.
Effect of dietary pulses on gut microbiota-related changes in rodents and humans.
| Pulse-Type | Cohort | State of Cohort | Age | Dose | Duration of Study | Key Shifts in Gut Microbiota | Outcome | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cooked chickpeas | Human | Healthy | 18–65 years | 200 g/d | 3 weeks |
Phylum ↑ Bacteroidetes Genus ↑ ↓ Species ↑ ↓ ↓ |
Reduction in pathogenic and putrefactive gut bacteria species in cohorts Less intestinal colonization by ammonia-producing bacterial species | [ |
| Cooked pinto beans | Human | Healthy; Pre-metabolic syndrome | 18–51 years | 130 g/d | 12 weeks + 4 weeks run-in |
Species ↑ ↓ |
High propionate production Lower serum total cholesterol, LDL, and HDL | [ |
| Cooked navy bean powder | Human | Colorectal cancer survivors (overweight and obese) | 47–81 years | 35 g/d | 28 days |
Species ↑ ↑ ↑ ↓ ↓ |
Boost in microbial richness compared baseline for colorectal cancer survivors but had no effect on their diversity | [ |
| Cooked navy beans (incorporated in meals and snacks) | Human | Colorectal cancer survivors (overweight and obese) | NB: 60.9 ± 11.0 years | 35 g/d | 4 weeks |
Thirty and twenty-six significant metabolite differences in stool samples from baseline and control, respectively Navy bean-derived metabolites (247/560) including N-methylpipecolate, 2-aminoadipate, piperidine, and vanillate Abundance of ophthalmate increased by 5.25 fold | [ | |
| Beans, chickpeas, peas, or lentils-based foods | Human | Healthy | 57 ± 6.3 | 150 g/d | 4 months |
Reduction in total cholesterol and LDC by 8.3% and 7.9% | [ | |
| Mice | IBS model | 7 weeks | 100–400 mg/kg | 15 days |
Minimized weight loss with no effect on food intake Attenuated zymosan-induced colonic macroscopic scores Reduced mast cell count, TNF-α in the colon Reduced visceral pain-related behaviors Dose-dependent reduction of c-Fos expression in the brain | [ | ||
| Chickpea supplemented diet | Mice (C57BL/6 male) | Healthy | 5 weeks | 200 g/kg diet | 3 weeks |
Family ↓ (feces only) ↓ Genus ↑ ↑ Species ↑ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ |
Enhanced colon crypt mucus content and mucin mRNA expression Improved expression of epithelial tight junction proteins Enhanced metagenomic functions (e.g., ↑ butanoate metabolism; ↑ flavonoid biosynthesis) Increased SCFAs production Enhanced taxa richness in the cecum | [ |
| Cooked white and dark red kidney beans | Mice (C57BL/6 male) | DSS induced colitis | 5 weeks | BD + 20% beans | 3 weeks |
Enhanced acetate, butyrate, and propionate production Increased colon crypt height, and MUC1 and Relmβ mRNA expression Reduced serum levels of IL-17A, TNF-α, IFN-γ, IL-1β, and IL-6 | [ | |
| Cooked Navy bean or black bean | Mice | Healthy | 4 weeks | Supplementation @20% to the basal diet | 3 weeks |
Genus ↑ ↑ ↑ undefined genera within the ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ Species ↑ ↓ ↓ |
Enhanced SCFAs production and expression of receptors GPR-41, 43, 109 Increased crypt length, epithelial cell proliferation, goblet cell number, crypt mucus level, and mucin mRNA expression Reduced serum endotoxin concentration Enhanced apical junctional complex components (occludin, JAM-A, ZO-1, and E-cadherin) | [ |
| Cranberry beans | Mice | Healthy and DSS induced colitis | 5 weeks | BD + 20% beans | 3 weeks |
Family ↑ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ Genus ↑ S24-7 Species ↓ ↓ |
Increased cecal SCFAs, colon crypt height, crypt goblet cell number, and mucus content Enhanced expression of Muc1, Klf4, Relmβ, and Reg3γ Reduced disease severity and colonic histological damage Increased gene expression of barrier function genes (Relmβ, Muc1-3, and Reg3γ) Diminishing of colonic and circulating inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IFNγ, IL-6, and TNF-α) | [ |
| Lentil, chickpea, bean, and dry pea | Mice | Healthy | 3–4 weeks | 40 g/100 g obesogenic diet (by replacing 35% protein) | 17 weeks |
Phylum ↑ Bacteroidetes (highest in lentil) ↑ Verrucomicrobia (in bean and lentil) Family ↑ ↑ ↑ ↓ ↓ Genus ↑ ↑ ↑ RF32 (of Alphaproteobacteria) ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ Species ↑ ↑ ↓ ↓ ↓ |
High a-diversity, especially for chickpea and dry pea High b-diversity Altered gut microbiota suggestive of anti-obesogenic physiologic outcomes | [ |
| Cooked red lentils | Mice | Healthy | 5 weeks | 20% | 3 weeks |
Phylum ↑ Firmicutes Family ↓ Genus ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ Unknown genus belonging to the |
Improved fecal microbiota α-diversity Abundance of SCFA producing bacteria Increased mRNA expression of SCFA receptors ( | [ |
| Chickpea, lentil, dry peas, and bean | Mice | Obese | 3–4 weeks | 40% | 17 weeks |
Phylum ↑ Bacteroidetes ↓ Firmicutes (statistically significant in bean and lentil diet) Species ↑ |
Three fold elevation of bacterial count in the cecum 2.2–5 fold increase in Bacteroidetes to Firmicutes ratio Reduced lipid accumulation in adipose tissue Decreased subcutaneous and visceral fat mass compared to high-fat control but greater compared to a low-fat control 108 differential metabolites identified related to pulse types | [ |
| Whole mung bean | Mice | Diet-induced obesity | 4 weeks | HFD + 30% bean | 12 weeks |
Phylum ↑ Bacteroidetes Family ↑ ↑ Genus ↑ ↑ unassigned member of ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ |
Reduction in hepatic steatosis Reduction in body weight gain, fat accumulation, and adipocyte size Significant a- and b- diversity Ameliorated insulin resistance and glucose tolerance Normalization of HFD-induced gut microbiota dysbiosis | [ |
| Lentil ( | Rats | Healthy | 8 weeks | 70.8% red lentil diet | 6 weeks |
Phylum ↑ Actinobacteria ↑ Bacteroidetes Family ↓ ↓ Species ↑ |
Reduced mean body weight Reduction in body fat and blood plasma triglycerol levels | [ |
| Yellow pea flour | Rats | Diet-induced obesity (5 w HFD feeding) | 5 weeks | 30% | 42 days |
Phylum ↓ Firmicutes Species ↓ |
Attenuated weight gain Low body fat | [ |
| Whole yellow pea flour | Hamster (Golden Syrian) | Hypercholesterolemic diet (28 days) | 2 weeks | 10% replacement of corn starch with pea flour in the diet | 28 days |
Order ↑ Lactobacillales Genus ↑ Unclassified clostridia ↑ Bacilli |
Reduced insulin levels High energy expenditure | [ |
NB: navy bean; BB: black bean; DSS: dextran sodium sulphate; IBS: irritable bowel syndrome; BD: basal diet; ↑: increased; ↓: decreased.
Effect of dietary pulses-derived resistant starches in modulating gut microbiota and related health outcomes.
| RS Type | RS Source | Cohort | State of Cohort/ | Age | Dose (g/d) | Duration of Study | Key Shifts in Gut Microbiota | Outcome | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RS2 | Yellow pea | Rats | Diet-induced obesity (5 weeks HFD feeding) | 5 weeks | 30% | 42 days |
Genus ↑ ↑ ↓ |
Less weight gain than control | [ |
| RS2 and RS3 | Native and autoclaved-retrograded lentil starch | Mice | HFD-induced obesity | Not given; weight 31.86 ± 1.95 g | Intragastric administration @ (400 mg/kg) | 6 weeks |
Phylum ↑ Bacteroidetes ↓ Firmicutes Genus ↑ Proteobacteria ↑ ↑ ↑ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ |
Suppression of body and liver weight gain Improvement in serum glucose and lipid profile Enhanced antioxidant status and gut microbiota structure | [ |
| RS1 | Intact cotyledon cells from pinto bean seeds | Human (N = 3) | Feces | Not given; BMI (18.5–25 kg/m2 | In vitro fecal fermentation study. 50 mg of intact, weakly damaged, and highly damaged cells added to feces: phosphate buffer solution (1:3 |
Genus ↑ ↑ ↓ |
Butyrate production increased as cell wall integrity weakens Injection of intact cells has microbiota composition more closely related with the purified cell wall polysaccharides | [ | |
| RS2 and RS3 | Native pea starch and retrograded autoclaved starch | Human (N = 4) | Feces | 20–26 years | In vitro fecal fermentation study. 3% resistant starch residues post 8 h simulated gastrointestinal digestion added to basal nutrient medium containing fecal slurry in ratio 1:9; incubated for 24 h |
Phylum ↑ Firmicutes ↑ Bacteroidetes ↓ Proteobacteria ↓ Actinobacteria ↓ Verrucomicrobia. Genus ↑ ↑ ↑ ↓ ↓ ↓ |
Significantly higher acetate, propionate, and total SCFAs than control Decreased α- diversity levels of intestinal flora | [ | |
| RS2 and RS3 | Native and pullulanase-debranched and acid-hydrolyzed pea starches | Human (N = 5) | Feces | 20–25 years | In vitro fecal fermentation study. 3% resistant starch added to basal nutrient medium containing fecal slurry in ratio 1:9; incubated for 24 h |
Phylum ↑ Bacteroidetes ↑ Firmicutes (in debranched and acid hydrolyzed samples) ↑ Actinobacteria ↓ Proteobacteria Genus ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↓ ↓ ↓ |
High propionate concentration followed by acetate and butyrate Reduced diversity index [ | [ | |
| RS1 and RS3 | Intact cotyledon cells of pinto beans and heated to different temperatures (60, 80, and 100 C for 1 h) | Human | Feces | 20–30 years | In vitro fecal fermentation study. 50 mg of intact, weakly damaged, and highly damaged cells added to feces: phosphate buffer solution (1:3 |
Genus ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ unclassified ↓ unidentified members of Species ↓ |
High acetate followed by butyrate and propionate High a-diversity | [ | |
HFD: high-fat diet; ↑: increased; ↓: decreased.
Effect of dietary cereals- and tubers-derived resistant starches on human gut microbiota.
| Sources | RS | Dose | Duration | Bacteria ↑ (Genus) | Intervention | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beans, wheat, maize, and barley | RS2 | 22 g + 25 g fiber | 4 weeks |
| - | [ |
| High amylose starch (unspecified) | RS2 | 40 g/d | 4 weeks |
| - | [ |
| High amylose starch (hi-maize 260) | RS2 | 45 g/d | 12 weeks | - | Prediabetes | [ |
| Hylon VII (70%RS) | RS2 | 30 g + 150 mL milk | 6 weeks |
| Cervical cancer (acute radiation proctitis) | [ |
| Raw potato, high amylose starch (hi-maize 260), and Arabinoxylan used in bread rolls and pancakes | RS2 | 24 g/d, bread rolls (7.0 g/d) and pancakes (8.4 g/d), bread rolls (6.0 g/d), and pancakes (8.4 g/d) | 4 weeks (X2) |
| Metabolic syndrome | [ |
| High amylose starch (hi-maize 260) | RS2 | Diet A: (66 g/d and 4 g/d) Diet B: (48 g/d and 3 g/d) | 2 weeks |
| Cardiovascular disease (plasma levels) | [ |
| Novelose 240 and 330 | RS2 | 30 g/d | 3 years | - | Hereditary colorectal cancer | [ |
| High amylose starch (hi-maize 260) and RDS (unspecified) | RS2 | 50 g/d (30 g Rs + 20 g RDS) | 4 weeks | - | Skeletal muscle and adipose tissue metabolism | [ |
| Biscuit (high amylose starch) | RS2/RS3 | 20 g/d (4 weeks) + 25 g/d (4 weeks) | 8 weeks |
| Chronic kidney disease | [ |
| Uncooked high amylose corn starch (63.3%RS) and extruded high amylose corn starch (29.9%RS) (Hylon VII) | RS2/RS3 | 32 g/d + Lithium | 4 weeks | - | Colon cancer | [ |
| Crackers (RS2: hi-maize 260 (60%RS); RS4: MGP Fiberysn® RW (85%RS)) | RS2/RS4 | 33 g | 17 weeks | Bifidobacteria and | - | [ |
| Bread (tapioca) | RS3 | 6 g/d | 12 weeks | - | Overweight and obesity (post-prandial blood glucose level) | [ |
| Unknown source | RS3 | 50–60 g/d | 10 weeks |
| - | [ |
| Scone (high amylose corn starch (VerafibeTM 2470) | RS4 | Unknown | 1 weeks | - | Postprandial glycemic response | [ |
| Hi-maize 260, Ingredion, USA | RS2 | 16 g/d | 4 weeks | Chronic kidney disease | [ | |
| High-amylose maize starch acetylated and butylated | RS2 | 40 g/d | 6 weeks |
| Type 1 diabetes | [ |
| Crystalline maize, cross-linked tapioca, and cross-linked potato | RS4 | 35 g/d | - | Crystalline maize (Eubacterium), cross-linked tapioca ( | - | [ |
| High amylose wheat | RS2 | 160 g bread and 75 g biscuits each day | 4 weeks |
| 2-wk low dietary fiber run-in period before feeding with RS diet | [ |
Modified from [107]. “-”: unreported; ↑: increased.
Figure 2Illustration depicting the reported and purported beneficial effects of resistant starch (RS) on aging-associated gut microbiota and metabolic health. SCFA: short-chain fatty acids; LPS: lipopolysaccharide; IBD: inflammatory bowel disease; IL: interleukin; TNF: tumor necrosis factor; : stimulation; ↑: increased; ↓: decreased.
Effect of dietary resistant starches on aging-associated gut microbiota and health outcomes.
| RS Type | RS Source | Cohort | State of Cohort | Age | Dose (g/d) | Duration of Study | Key Shifts in Gut Microbiota | Outcome | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RS2 | Human | Healthy | Elderly (>70 years) | 30 g/d | 12 weeks |
Phylum ↓ Proteobacteria Genus ↑ Species ↑ |
Marginal increase in butyrate level in elderly | [ | |
| RS2 | Human | Healthy | Elderly (>70 years) | 30 g/d | 12 weeks |
Reduced blood glucose levels and insulin resistance in elderly | [ | ||
| RS2 | High-amylose maize | Mice | Healthy | 18–20 mo | 18–36% RS | 10 weeks |
Phylum ↓ Firmicutes Family ↑ ↑ Genus ↑ ↑ ↓ ↓ |
Increased proglucagon gene expression No significant effect on PYY expression Increase in cecal (empty and full) and entire gastrointestinal tract weights | [ |
| RS2 | High amylose maize starch with 56% RS2 | Mice | HFD feeding | 18 mo | HFD + 20% RS2 | 16 weeks |
Phylum ↓ Proteobacteria Genus ↑ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ ↓ |
Decreased abundance of pathogen taxa Reversed weight gain and hepatic steatosis and inflammation Increased intestinal permeability Decreased serum and fecal LPS, hepatic IL-4, and colonic IL-2 expression Increased expression of colonic mucin 2 High butyric acid levels and low isobutyric and isovaleric acid levels | [ |
| RS2 | Acorn and sago | Mice | HFD induced obesity | 8–10 weeks | HFD + 5% RS | 8 weeks |
Phylum ↓ Firmicutes Genus ↓ ↓ ↓ |
Ameliorate HFD-induced glucose intolerance and insulin resistance Increase in SCFAs levels Decrease in leaky gut and inflammation | [ |
| RS2 | High-amylose maize | Mice | Healthy | 18–20 mo | 18–36% RS | 10 weeks | - |
No effect on body weight and body composition Increased cecum weights Increased expression of cecal proglucagon and PYY mRNA No significant difference in soluble cytokine receptors (sVEGFR1, sTNF-Rb, sIL-4R, sRAGE and sIL- 2Ra) and TNFa expression (gene and protein) in visceral fat | [ |
| RS2 + RS3 | Corn (having low starch gelatinzation and high RS) | Dogs | Healthy | 11.5 ± 0.38 years | Feed supplemented @ 1.46% RS | 61 days | - |
↑ proglucagon level ↓ fecal pH ↑ fecal butyrate, propionate, and total SCFA concentrations | [ |
“-”: unreported; HFD: High-fat diet; ↑: increased; ↓: decreased.