Dietary or supplemental fermentable fiber intake reduces the presence of Clostridium XI in mouse intestinal microbiota: The importance of higher fecal bacterial load and density.

OBJECTIVES:Clostridium difficile infection is a public health concern. C. difficile was found in healthy human intestine as a member of Clostridium XI. Because soluble fermentable fiber ingestion affects intestinal microbiota, we used fiber-containing diets to determine the intestinal microbial cond...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wei Zheng, Kairui Wang, Yijun Sun, Shiu-Ming Kuo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6168175?pdf=render
_version_ 1818564777616605184
author Wei Zheng
Kairui Wang
Yijun Sun
Shiu-Ming Kuo
author_facet Wei Zheng
Kairui Wang
Yijun Sun
Shiu-Ming Kuo
author_sort Wei Zheng
collection DOAJ
description OBJECTIVES:Clostridium difficile infection is a public health concern. C. difficile was found in healthy human intestine as a member of Clostridium XI. Because soluble fermentable fiber ingestion affects intestinal microbiota, we used fiber-containing diets to determine the intestinal microbial condition that could reduce the presence of Clostridium XI. METHODS:Newly weaned male mice were assigned to three published diets: Control AIN-93G purified diet with only poorly fermented cellulose; Control plus 5% purified fermentable fiber inulin; Chow with wheat, soybean and corn that provide a mixture of unpurified dietary fibers. Methods were developed to quantify 24-hour fecal microbial load and microbial DNA density. The relative abundance of bacterial genera and the bacterial diversity were determined through 16S rRNA sequence-based fecal microbiota analysis. RESULTS:Mice adjusted food intake to maintain the same energy intake and body weight under these three moderate-fat (7% w:w) diets. Chow-feeding led to higher food intake but also higher 24-h fecal output. Chow-feeding and 1-8 wk ingestion of inulin-supplemented diet increased daily fecal microbial load and density along with lowering the prevalence of Clostridium XI to undetectable. Clostridium XI remained undetectable until 4 weeks after the termination of inulin-supplemented diet. Fermentable fiber intake did not consistently increase probiotic genera such as Bifidobacterium or Lactobacillus. Chow feeding, but not inulin supplementation, increased the bacterial diversity. CONCLUSIONS:Increase fecal microbial load/density upon fermentable fiber ingestion is associated with a lower and eventually undetectable presence of Clostridium XI. Higher bacterial diversity or abundance of particular genera is not apparently essential. Future studies are needed to see whether this observation can be translated into the reduction of C. difficile at the species level in at-risk populations.
first_indexed 2024-12-14T01:33:01Z
format Article
id doaj.art-62759654d833471a8939122220554b05
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-14T01:33:01Z
publishDate 2018-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-62759654d833471a8939122220554b052022-12-21T23:21:59ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-011310e020505510.1371/journal.pone.0205055Dietary or supplemental fermentable fiber intake reduces the presence of Clostridium XI in mouse intestinal microbiota: The importance of higher fecal bacterial load and density.Wei ZhengKairui WangYijun SunShiu-Ming KuoOBJECTIVES:Clostridium difficile infection is a public health concern. C. difficile was found in healthy human intestine as a member of Clostridium XI. Because soluble fermentable fiber ingestion affects intestinal microbiota, we used fiber-containing diets to determine the intestinal microbial condition that could reduce the presence of Clostridium XI. METHODS:Newly weaned male mice were assigned to three published diets: Control AIN-93G purified diet with only poorly fermented cellulose; Control plus 5% purified fermentable fiber inulin; Chow with wheat, soybean and corn that provide a mixture of unpurified dietary fibers. Methods were developed to quantify 24-hour fecal microbial load and microbial DNA density. The relative abundance of bacterial genera and the bacterial diversity were determined through 16S rRNA sequence-based fecal microbiota analysis. RESULTS:Mice adjusted food intake to maintain the same energy intake and body weight under these three moderate-fat (7% w:w) diets. Chow-feeding led to higher food intake but also higher 24-h fecal output. Chow-feeding and 1-8 wk ingestion of inulin-supplemented diet increased daily fecal microbial load and density along with lowering the prevalence of Clostridium XI to undetectable. Clostridium XI remained undetectable until 4 weeks after the termination of inulin-supplemented diet. Fermentable fiber intake did not consistently increase probiotic genera such as Bifidobacterium or Lactobacillus. Chow feeding, but not inulin supplementation, increased the bacterial diversity. CONCLUSIONS:Increase fecal microbial load/density upon fermentable fiber ingestion is associated with a lower and eventually undetectable presence of Clostridium XI. Higher bacterial diversity or abundance of particular genera is not apparently essential. Future studies are needed to see whether this observation can be translated into the reduction of C. difficile at the species level in at-risk populations.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6168175?pdf=render
spellingShingle Wei Zheng
Kairui Wang
Yijun Sun
Shiu-Ming Kuo
Dietary or supplemental fermentable fiber intake reduces the presence of Clostridium XI in mouse intestinal microbiota: The importance of higher fecal bacterial load and density.
PLoS ONE
title Dietary or supplemental fermentable fiber intake reduces the presence of Clostridium XI in mouse intestinal microbiota: The importance of higher fecal bacterial load and density.
title_full Dietary or supplemental fermentable fiber intake reduces the presence of Clostridium XI in mouse intestinal microbiota: The importance of higher fecal bacterial load and density.
title_fullStr Dietary or supplemental fermentable fiber intake reduces the presence of Clostridium XI in mouse intestinal microbiota: The importance of higher fecal bacterial load and density.
title_full_unstemmed Dietary or supplemental fermentable fiber intake reduces the presence of Clostridium XI in mouse intestinal microbiota: The importance of higher fecal bacterial load and density.
title_short Dietary or supplemental fermentable fiber intake reduces the presence of Clostridium XI in mouse intestinal microbiota: The importance of higher fecal bacterial load and density.
title_sort dietary or supplemental fermentable fiber intake reduces the presence of clostridium xi in mouse intestinal microbiota the importance of higher fecal bacterial load and density
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6168175?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT weizheng dietaryorsupplementalfermentablefiberintakereducesthepresenceofclostridiumxiinmouseintestinalmicrobiotatheimportanceofhigherfecalbacterialloadanddensity
AT kairuiwang dietaryorsupplementalfermentablefiberintakereducesthepresenceofclostridiumxiinmouseintestinalmicrobiotatheimportanceofhigherfecalbacterialloadanddensity
AT yijunsun dietaryorsupplementalfermentablefiberintakereducesthepresenceofclostridiumxiinmouseintestinalmicrobiotatheimportanceofhigherfecalbacterialloadanddensity
AT shiumingkuo dietaryorsupplementalfermentablefiberintakereducesthepresenceofclostridiumxiinmouseintestinalmicrobiotatheimportanceofhigherfecalbacterialloadanddensity