1 research outputs found
Intestinal Microbial and Metabolic Profiling of Mice Fed with High-Glucose and High-Fructose Diets
Increased sugar intake
is implicated in Type-2 diabetes and fatty
liver disease; however, the mechanisms through which glucose and fructose
promote these conditions are unclear. We hypothesize that alterations
in intestinal metabolite and microbiota profiles specific to each
monosaccharide are involved. Two groups of six adult C57BL/6 mice
were fed for 10-weeks with diets with glucose (G) or fructose (F)
as sole carbohydrates, and a third group was fed with a normal chow
carbohydrate mixture (N). Fecal metabolites were profiled by nuclear
magnetic resonance (NMR) and microbial composition by real-time polymerase
chain reaction (qPCR). Although N, G and F mice exhibited similar
weight gains (with slight slower gains for F) and glucose tolerance,
multivariate analysis of NMR data indicated that F mice were separated
from N and G, with decreased butyrate and glutamate and increased
fructose, succinate, taurine, tyrosine, and xylose. The different
sugar diets also resulted in distinct intestinal microbiota profiles.
That associated with fructose seemed to hold more potential to induce
host metabolic disturbances compared to glucose, mainly by promoting
bile acid deconjugation and taurine release and compromising intestinal
barrier integrity. This may reflect the noted nonquantitative intestinal
fructose absorption hence increasing its availability for microbial
metabolism, a subject for further investigation