Nutrients (Sep 2023)

In Vitro Fermentation of Polysaccharide from Edible Alga <i>Enteromorpha clathrata</i> by the Gut Microbiota of Patients with Ulcerative Colitis

  • Mingfeng Ma,
  • Min Quan,
  • Jiaxue Zhang,
  • Aijun Zhang,
  • Puyue Gao,
  • Qingsen Shang,
  • Guangli Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15194122
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 19
p. 4122

Abstract

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Dietary intake of the sulfated polysaccharide from edible alga E. clathrata (ECP) has recently been illustrated to attenuate ulcerative colitis (UC) by targeting gut dysbiosis in mice. However, ECP is not easily absorbed in the gut and, as a potential candidate for next-generation prebiotics development, how it is fermented by human gut microbiota has not been characterized. Here, using in vitro anaerobic fermentation and 16S high-throughput sequencing, we illustrate for the first time the detailed fermentation characteristics of ECP by the gut microbiota of nine UC patients. Our results indicated that, compared to that of glucose, fermentation of ECP by human gut microbiota produced a higher amount of anti-inflammatory acetate and a lower amount of pro-inflammatory lactate. Additionally, ECP fermentation helped to shape a more balanced microbiota composition with increased species richness and diversity. Moreover, ECP significantly stimulated the growth of anti-colitis bacteria in the human gut, including Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, Bacteroides ovatus, Blautia spp., Bacteroides uniformis, and Parabacteroides spp. Altogether, our study provides the first evidence for the prebiotic effect of ECP on human gut microbiota and sheds new light on the development of ECP as a novel prebiotic candidate for the prevention and potential treatment of UC.

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