Abstract

Simple SummaryMicrobes present in the large intestine of humans and companion animals produce bioactive metabolites from host-ingested food. These bioactive metabolites can influence host health. A prior study in dogs that were healthy or had chronic enteritis/gastroenteritis showed that stool quality improved when they ate food containing a fiber bundle made from fibers of pecan shells, flax seed, cranberry, citrus, and beet. In addition, eating food containing the fiber bundle resulted in the gut bacteria shifting from digesting mainly protein to digesting mainly carbohydrates. The present study tested the impact of the fiber bundle at a lower range of concentrations in dogs. Fecal levels of several bioactive metabolites with beneficial antioxidant or anti-inflammatory properties increased after dogs consumed food with the fiber bundle, though no changes in the bacteria or their functional pathways were observed. Stool quality remained in the acceptable range. These results suggest that the gut bacteria were able to digest the fiber bundle to produce beneficial bioactive metabolites to improve host health.This study assessed changes in canine fecal metabolites and microbiota with the consumption of foods with increasing concentrations of a fiber bundle including pecan shells, flax seed, and powders of cranberry, citrus, and beet that was previously shown (at 14% w/w) to improve stool quality, shift fecal bacterial metabolism from proteolysis to saccharolysis, increase abundance of saccharolytic bacteria, and decrease abundance of proteolytic bacteria. In this study, 48 healthy adult dogs were split evenly to consume different inclusion levels (0%, 1%, 2%, and 4%) of the fiber bundle for a 31-day period following a 28-day pre-feed period. Increases from baseline in the fecal short-chain fatty acids butyric acid, valeric acid, and hexanoic acid were observed only in the dogs that consumed the food with the 4% fiber bundle. With addition of any level of the fiber bundle, increases were seen in the polyphenols hesperidin, hesperetin, ponciretin, secoisolariciresinol diglucoside, secoisolariciresinol, and enterodiol. However, fecal microbiota and their metabolism, and stool scores were largely unaffected by the fiber bundle. Overall, addition of the fiber bundle appeared to increase bioactive metabolites of increased antioxidant and anti-inflammatory potency for beneficial to health and, at levels ≥4%, shifted gut bacterial metabolism toward saccharolysis.

Highlights

  • The interplay among nutrition, the gut microbiota and its metabolites, and host health has been the subject of numerous studies over the last decade [1,2]

  • Stool quality [17] improved in both healthy dogs and those with chronic enteritis/gastroenteritis following consumption of food with the fiber bundle [16].The present study extended the original study by testing the fiber-bound polyphenolic ingredients of the fiber bundle at different levels in a single type of canine food, with the purpose of testing the differential impact on fecal metabolites and microbiota as availability of substrates for fermentation decreased

  • A previous study demonstrated that inclusion of a fiber bundle at 14% in canine food significantly increased the abundance of saccharolytic gut bacteria, decreased the abundance of proteolytic bacteria, and shifted gut microbial metabolism toward saccharolytic activity [16]

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Summary

Introduction

The interplay among nutrition, the gut microbiota and its metabolites, and host health has been the subject of numerous studies over the last decade [1,2]. Dietary consumption of fiber is known to yield health benefits, and many fiber-rich foods are high in polyphenols. Most dietary polyphenols arrive largely intact to the large intestine, where they are metabolized by intestinal microbiota [3], and these postbiotic compounds are proposed to confer many of the observed beneficial health effects [4]. These compounds appear to modulate the gut microbiota, with a decrease in pathogenic bacteria [4,5]. Consumption of high-fiber foods results in the increase of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), which are used as energy sources for colonocytes, contribute to maintenance of the intestinal tight junction barrier, and decrease inflammation [6,7]. An increase in SCFAs is considered to be beneficial since they are decreased in people with ulcerative colitis or Crohn disease [8]

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