Composition and energy harvesting capacity of the gut microbiota: relationship to diet, obesity and time in mouse models
University College Cork · Alimentary Health (Ireland) · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Seven-week-old male ob/ob mice were fed a low-fat diet and wild-type mice were fed either a low-fat diet or a HF-diet for 8 weeks (n=8/group). They were assessed at 7, 11 and 15 weeks of age for: fat and lean body mass (by NMR); faecal and caecal short-chain fatty acids (SCFA, by gas chromatography); faecal energy content (by bomb calorimetry) and microbial composition (by metagenomic pyrosequencing).
A progressive increase in Firmicutes was confirmed in both HF-fed and ob/ob mice reaching statistical significance in the former, but this phylum was unchanged over time in the lean controls. Reductions in Bacteroidetes were also found in ob/ob mice. However, changes in the microbiota were dissociated from markers of energy harvest. Thus, although the faecal energy in the ob/ob mice was significantly decreased at 7 weeks, and caecal SCFA increased, these did not persist and faecal acetate diminished over time in both ob/ob and HF-fed mice, but not in lean controls. Furthermore, the proportion of the major phyla did not correlate with energy harvest markers.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 17.29
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 50
Authors
13- EFEileen F. Murphy
University College Cork, Alimentary Health (Ireland)
- PDPaul D. Cotter
Teagasc - The Irish Agriculture and Food Development Authority, University College Cork
- SASara A. Healy
Alimentary Health (Ireland)
- TMTatiana M. Marques
Teagasc - The Irish Agriculture and Food Development Authority, University College Cork
- ÓOÓrla O’Sullivan
Teagasc - The Irish Agriculture and Food Development Authority, University College Cork
Topics & keywords
- Firmicutes
- Bacteroidetes
- Obesity
- Gut flora
- Biology
- Pyrosequencing
- Food science
- Feces
- Affordable and clean energy