Abstract

Introduction: It has been suggested that the gut microbiome of patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is unable to ferment dietary fibre. This project explored the in vitro effect of fibre fermentation on production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) and on microbiome composition. Methods: Faecal samples were collected from 40 adults (>16 y) with IBD (n = 20 with Crohn’s disease and n = 20 with ulcerative colitis) in clinical remission and 20 healthy controls (HC). In vitro batch culture fermentations were carried out using as substrates maize starch, apple pectin, raftilose, wheat bran, α cellulose and a mixture of these five fibres. SCFA concentration (umol/g) was quantified with gas chromatography and microbiome was profiled with 16S rRNA sequencing. Results: Fibre fermentation did not correct the baseline microbial dysbiosis or lower diversity seen in either patients with CD or UC. For all fibres, up to 51% of baseline ASVs or genera changed in abundance in HC. In patients with IBD, fermentation of fibre substrates had no effect on species or genera abundance. Production of SCFA varied among the different fibre substrates but this was not different between the two IBD groups and compared to HC after either 5 or 24 h fermentation. Conclusions: Despite extensive microbial dysbiosis, patients with IBD have a similar capacity to ferment fibre and release SCFA as HC. Fibre supplementation alone may be unlikely to restore to a healthy status the compositional shifts characteristic of the IBD microbiome.

Highlights

  • It has been suggested that the gut microbiome of patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is unable to ferment dietary fibre

  • For the second experiment, where we evaluated the fermentative capacity of the gut microbiome, fermentation aliquots were drawn at 5 and 24 h of fermentation to assess the rate of production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) and total amount produced, respectively

  • We show that in patients with IBD in clinical remission, five different types of rapid, slow and minimally fermentable fibre failed to correct IBD-related microbiome dysbiosis or to influence the composition of bacterial taxa. This was in direct contrast to healthy controls (HC), where extensive changes in species abundance were observed after fibre fermentation

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Summary

Introduction

It has been suggested that the gut microbiome of patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is unable to ferment dietary fibre. This project explored the in vitro effect of fibre fermentation on production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) and on microbiome composition. In patients with IBD, fermentation of fibre substrates had no effect on species or genera abundance. Fermentation of dietary fibre regulates microbial growth and composition, and the end-products of this anaerobic saccharolytic process are predominantly short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) [5]. Despite the importance of SCFA in preserving health, their role in IBD remains unclear and is less well studied [4], in direct contrast with our extensive and increasing knowledge of the composition of the microbiome in IBD and its role in disease development

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