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Dietary heme-enriched Corynebacterium extract exerts health benefits by reshaping gut microbiotaoa mark
  • Lee, Seungki ;
  • Cho, Youngjin ;
  • Park, Sehyeon ;
  • Park, Kyung Hoon ;
  • Kim, Mihye ;
  • Lee, Seohyeon ;
  • Cha, Min Jeong ;
  • Chang, Suhwan ;
  • Yoon, Hyunjin ;
  • Kim, Pil
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Publication Year
2024-12-01
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Citation
Food Bioscience, Vol.62
Keyword
Gut healthGut microbiotahSCPLipid metabolism
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
Food ScienceBiochemistry
Abstract
We previously reported that a heme-enriched Corynebacterium extract (hSCP) alleviated weight gain and lowered subcutaneous fat mass in a murine model. To understand the mechanisms underlying the beneficial effects of dietary hSCP, we investigated the histological and microbiological changes in the guts of mice after hSCP administration in this study. Dietary hSCP lowered serum triglyceride and cholesterol levels and restrained adipose tissue expansion in mice fed a normal diet (ND) or a high-fat diet (HFD). The colonic mucosa was prominently lined with acidic and neutral mucin-enriched goblet cells and Muc2 transcription was increased by dietary hSCP in HFD-fed mice. Given the nutritional content of hSCP, microbial shifts triggered by dietary hSCP were dissected from the cecum and colon of the mice. Bacterial community compositions in the luminal contents were significantly reshaped by hSCP supplementation in HFD-fed mice and also differed between intestinal loci, that is, the cecum and colon. Dietary hSCP enriched short-chain fatty acid-producing bacterial genera in ND-fed mice, while attenuating other mucin-degrading bacteria in HFD-fed mice. The addition of hSCP to a co-culture of a defined microbiota community promoted Lactobacillus gasseri proliferation compared with nine other species. An in vitro culture medium supplemented with hSCP increased bile salt hydrolase activity and cholesterol assimilation by L. gasseri, which is reminiscent of the beneficial effects of Lactobacillus spp. as cholesterol-lowering probiotics. Our findings demonstrate the potential of hSCP as a dietary supplement with beneficial effects on lipid metabolism and gut health.
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/34444
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fbio.2024.105062
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Type
Article
Funding
This work was supported by the Korean Ministry of Science and ICT [grant number NRF 2022M3A9I3018121] and Ministry of Agriculture, Food, and Rural Affairs [RS-2021-IP821062].We appreciate the Metabolomics Core at the Convergence Medicine Research Center, Asan Medical Center, for its support and instrumentation. The authors extend their appreciation to Hemolab l. c. (Seoul, Korea) for providing materials and tissue samples, which largely supported this study.This work was supported by the Korean Ministry of Science and ICT [grant number NRF2022M3A9I3018121] and Ministry of Agriculture, Food, and Rural Affairs [RS-2021-IP821062].
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