Literature DB >> 7547846

Estimation of the fermentability of dietary fibre in vitro: a European interlaboratory study.

J L Barry1, C Hoebler, G T Macfarlane, S Macfarlane, J C Mathers, K A Reed, P B Mortensen, I Nordgaard, I R Rowland, C J Rumney.   

Abstract

Five European laboratories tested a simple in vitro batch system for dietary fibre fermentation studies. The inoculum was composed of fresh human faeces mixed with a carbonate-phosphate buffer complex supplemented with trace elements and urea. Five dietary fibre sources (cellulose, sugarbeet fibre, soyabean fibre, maize bran and pectin) were used by each laboratory on three occasions to determine pH, residual non-starch polysaccharides (NSP) and short-chain fatty acid production during fermentation. Cellulose and maize bran degradabilities were very low (7.2(SE 10.8) and 6.2 (SE 9.1)% respectively after 24 h), whereas pectin and soyabean fibre were highly degraded (97.4 (SE 4.4) and 91.1 (SE 3.4)% respectively after 24 h). Sugarbeet fibre exhibited an intermediate level of degradability (59.5 (SE 14.9)%). Short-chain fatty acid production was closely related to NSP degradation (r 0.99). Although each variable was ranked similarly by all laboratories, some differences occurred with respect to absolute values. However, the adaptation of donors to the experimental substrates was not an influential factor. Interlaboratory differences could be reduced either by adding less substrate during incubations or using less-diluted inocula. In vitro fermentations with inocula made from human faeces and from rat caecal contents gave similar results. There was a close correspondence between the data obtained in the present experiment and those previously published in in vivo studies in the rat using the same fibres. The in vitro batch system tested during the present study provides a rapid means of obtaining quantitative estimates of the fermentation and the estimation of the energy content of new sources of dietary fibre.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7547846     DOI: 10.1079/bjn19950137

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Nutr        ISSN: 0007-1145            Impact factor:   3.718


  20 in total

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4.  Factors affecting the conversion of apple polyphenols to phenolic acids and fruit matrix to short-chain fatty acids by human faecal microbiota in vitro.

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5.  In vitro microbiotic fermentation causes an extensive metabolite turnover of rye bran phytochemicals.

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6.  Effect of glucose oxidase and pentosanase on the prebiotic potentials of wheat arabinoxylans in an in vitro fermentation system.

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Review 7.  Apples and cardiovascular health--is the gut microbiota a core consideration?

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Authors:  X F Kong; Y Z Zhang; X Wu; Y L Yin; Z L Tan; Y Feng; F Y Yan; M J Bo; R L Huang; T J Li
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9.  Effect of commercial breakfast fibre cereals compared with corn flakes on postprandial blood glucose, gastric emptying and satiety in healthy subjects: a randomized blinded crossover trial.

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10.  Differential responses of gut microbiota to the same prebiotic formula in oligotrophic and eutrophic batch fermentation systems.

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