Abstract

Orange juice containing oligosaccharides and dextran was assessed, after in vitro digestion, in a fermentative system with fecal microbiota from two donors (A and B) in anaerobiosis (37 °C/48 h). Microbiota analysis was performed using 16S rRNA sequencing, and HPLC quantified the metabolites. Oligosaccharides and dextran were resistant to digestion and were consumed during colonic fermentation. Lactate and acetate were the main metabolites, followed by butyrate, propionate, and isobutyrate. High propionate accumulation and fast consumption of oligosaccharides were observed for donor B. Lactobacillus ruminis (44.96 %) presented an increased relative abundance for donor A. Bifidobacterium adolescentis (41.73 %) was remarkable for donor B after fermentation. In addition, the functional orange juice promoted the growth of emerging probiotics such as Bacteroides xylanisolvens and reduced some strains, such as Clostridia sp. Thus, the potentially prebiotic orange juice enhances gut microbiota composition and might be a suitable product for the functional food market.

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