Lutsiv Tymofiy, McGinley John N, Neil-McDonald Elizabeth S, Weir Tiffany L, Foster Michelle T, Thompson Henry J
Cancer Prevention Laboratory, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA.
Graduate Program in Cell and Molecular Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA.
Foods. 2022 Apr 15;11(8):1153. doi: 10.3390/foods11081153.
Underconsumption of dietary fiber and the milieu of chemicals with which it is associated is a health concern linked to the increasing global burden of chronic diseases. The benefits of fiber are partially attributed to modulation of the gut microbiota, whose composition and function depend on the amount and quality of microbiota-accessible substrates in the diet. However, not all types of fiber are equally accessible to the gut microbiota. L., or common bean, is a food type rich in fiber as well as other prebiotics posing a great potential to positively impact diet-microbiota-host interactions. To elucidate the magnitude of bean's effects on the gut microbiota, increasing doses of common bean were administered in macronutrient-matched diet formulations. The microbial communities in the ceca of female and male mice were evaluated via 16S rRNA gene sequencing. As the bean dose increased, the Bacillota:Bacteroidota ratio (formerly referred to as the Firmicutes:Bacteroidetes ratio) was reduced and α-diversity decreased, whereas the community composition was distinctly different between the diet groups according to β-diversity. These effects were more pronounced in female mice compared to male mice. Compositional analyses identified a dose-responsive bean-induced shift in microbial composition. With an increasing bean dose, Rikenellaceae, , and RF39, which are associated with health benefits, were enhanced. More taxa, however, were suppressed, among which were , , , and , which are predominantly associated with chronic disease risk. Investigation of the origins of the dose dependent and biological sex differences in response to common bean consumption may provide insights into bean-gut microbiota-host interactions important to developing food-based precision approaches to chronic disease prevention and control.
膳食纤维摄入不足及其相关的化学物质环境是一个与全球慢性病负担日益增加相关的健康问题。纤维的益处部分归因于对肠道微生物群的调节,其组成和功能取决于饮食中微生物可利用底物的数量和质量。然而,并非所有类型的纤维都能同等程度地被肠道微生物群利用。菜豆,即普通豆,是一种富含纤维以及其他益生元的食物类型,对饮食-微生物群-宿主相互作用产生积极影响具有巨大潜力。为了阐明菜豆对肠道微生物群的影响程度,在宏量营养素匹配的饮食配方中给予递增剂量的普通豆。通过16S rRNA基因测序评估雌性和雄性小鼠盲肠中的微生物群落。随着菜豆剂量的增加,芽孢杆菌门与拟杆菌门的比例(以前称为厚壁菌门与拟杆菌门的比例)降低,α多样性下降,而根据β多样性,不同饮食组之间的群落组成明显不同。与雄性小鼠相比,这些影响在雌性小鼠中更为明显。成分分析确定了菜豆诱导的微生物组成的剂量反应性变化。随着菜豆剂量的增加,与健康益处相关的理研菌科、 和RF39得到增强。然而,更多的分类群受到抑制,其中包括 、 、 和 ,它们主要与慢性病风险相关。对食用普通豆后剂量依赖性和生物学性别差异的起源进行研究,可能有助于深入了解菜豆-肠道微生物群-宿主相互作用,这对于开发基于食物的慢性病预防和控制精准方法具有重要意义。