以肠道微生物群为目标的膳食中添加可发酵纤维和多酚可以防止低氧缺氧引起的肠道通透性增加。

IF 2.3 3区 医学 Q3 PHYSIOLOGY
J Philip Karl, Heather S Fagnant, Patrick N Radcliffe, Marques Wilson, Anthony J Karis, Briony Sayers, Anisha Wijeyesekera, Glenn R Gibson, Harris R Lieberman, Grace E Giles, Jason W Soares
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引用次数: 0

摘要

肠道微生物群和肠道屏障之间的相互作用可能有助于高原疾病的病理生理。本研究旨在确定在低气压低氧条件下,饲粮中添加可发酵纤维和多酚源混合物对肠道微生物群组成、粪便短链脂肪酸(SCFA)以及肠道功能和通透性的影响。健康成年人参与了一项随机、双盲、交叉研究。含有富含低聚果糖的菊粉、半乳糖低聚糖、高直链玉米淀粉、可可、绿茶和蔓越莓提取物和蓝莓粉(FP)或麦芽糊精(安慰剂)的食品;在3个为期2周的阶段中每天食用PL),其中间隔≥1周的洗脱期。在每个阶段的最后36小时,参与者居住在模拟低(LA;500米)或高(HA;创建三个实验条件:PL+LA, PL+HA, FP+HA。26名参与者完成了≥1个研究阶段,13名参与者(12名男性;21±3年;BMI(25.4±2.4kg/m2)均完成三个阶段。结果表明,FP可减轻缺氧引起的小肠和近端结肠内肠道通透性的增加,同时增加双歧杆菌的相对丰度,降低肠道微生物群α-多样性和结肠pH。双歧杆菌的相对丰度越高,结肠pH越低,肠道通透性降低越明显。然而,在低气压缺氧暴露期间,FP并没有改变粪便中短链脂肪酸的浓度,并增加了胃肠道症状和高原反应。研究结果表明,用可发酵纤维和多酚的组合靶向肠道微生物群可以防止低气压缺氧引起的肠道通透性增加,但这种好处确实转化为减少高原病症状。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Gut microbiota-targeted dietary supplementation with fermentable fibers and polyphenols prevents hypobaric hypoxia-induced increases in intestinal permeability.

Interactions between the gut microbiota and intestinal barrier may contribute to the pathophysiology of high-altitude illnesses. This study aimed to determine the effects of targeting the gut microbiota using dietary supplementation with a blend of fermentable fibers and polyphenol sources on gut microbiota composition, fecal short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), and intestinal function and permeability during hypobaric hypoxia exposure. Healthy adults participated in a randomized, placebo-controlled, crossover study. Food products containing oligofructose-enriched inulin, galacto-oligosaccharide, high-amylose corn starch, cocoa, green tea and cranberry extracts, and blueberry powder (FP) or maltodextrin (placebo; PL) were consumed daily during three 2-wk phases separated by a ≥1-wk washout. During the final 36 h of each phase, participants resided in a hypobaric chamber simulating low (LA; 500 m) or high (HA; 4,300 m) altitude creating three experimental conditions: PL + LA, PL + HA, and FP + HA. Twenty-six participants completed ≥1 study phase and 13 [12 male; 21 ± 3 yr; body mass index (BMI) 25.4 ± 2.4 kg/m2] completed all three phases. Results demonstrated that FP mitigated hypoxia-induced increases in intestinal permeability within the small intestine and proximal colon while increasing Bifidobacterium relative abundance and decreasing gut microbiota α-diversity and colonic pH. Higher Bifidobacterium relative abundance and lower colonic pH were associated with greater reductions in intestinal permeability. However, FP did not alter fecal SCFA concentrations and increased gastrointestinal symptoms and altitude sickness during hypobaric hypoxia exposure. Findings suggest that targeting the gut microbiota with a combination of fermentable fibers and polyphenols can prevent hypobaric hypoxia-induced increases in intestinal permeability but that benefit does translate into a reduction in altitude illness symptoms.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Dietary supplementation targeting the gut microbiota may provide novel approaches to improving physiologic responses to environmental stressors such as those experienced during sojourn at high terrestrial altitudes. This study demonstrated that gut microbiota-targeted dietary supplementation using a blend of fermentable fibers and polyphenol sources can prevent hypobaric hypoxia-induced decrements in intestinal permeability. Findings support the emerging concept that the gut microbiota may be a modifiable factor influencing physiologic responses in austere environments.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
3.60%
发文量
145
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology publishes original investigations that illuminate normal or abnormal regulation and integration of physiological mechanisms at all levels of biological organization, ranging from molecules to humans, including clinical investigations. Major areas of emphasis include regulation in genetically modified animals; model organisms; development and tissue plasticity; neurohumoral control of circulation and hypertension; local control of circulation; cardiac and renal integration; thirst and volume, electrolyte homeostasis; glucose homeostasis and energy balance; appetite and obesity; inflammation and cytokines; integrative physiology of pregnancy-parturition-lactation; and thermoregulation and adaptations to exercise and environmental stress.
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