Abstract
Health effects of fermented milks have been associated with the metabolic activity of lactic acid bacteria in the gastrointestinal tract. It has been proposed that an increased excretion of urea nitrogen via microbial protein may decrease the workload on kidneys and liver. Therefore, a study was carried out in healthy elderly human subjects to investigate the incorporation of [15N2]urea nitrogen into plasma and fecal proteins and amino acids. Over a period of 10 d 13 healthy elderly subjects ingested daily a freeze-dried microbial preparation which contained different genera of lactic acid bacteria and is used to produce fermented milk products. One of the strains was originally isolated from stool samples of elderly people from the Caucasus region (Lactobacillus plantarum). No stimulation of fecal protein-nitrogen excretion and no increase in 15N-abundances in fecal protein was measured following the administration of the viable microbial preparation and a [15N2]urea bolus. Tentatively, it was concluded that this may have been caused by the inability of the microbial culture to survive the gastro-intestinal passage and (or) by the absence of additional fermentable carbohydrates in the diet as energy source for bacterial protein synthesis in the large intestine. However, using a highly sensitive GC-C-IRMS method we observed a significant incorporation of 15N into plasma protein amino acids. 15N-Enrichments in single amino acids were found according to their participation in transamination reactions. The slight enrichment of lysine which is not transaminated in mammalian tissues may indicate a microbial synthesis and absorption of bacterial lysine.
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