npj Science of Food (Jul 2024)

Calcium-rich dairy matrix protects better than mineral calcium against colonic luminal haem-induced alterations in male rats

  • Maïwenn Olier,
  • Nathalie Naud,
  • Edwin Fouché,
  • Valérie Tondereau,
  • Ingrid Ahn,
  • Nadine Leconte,
  • Florence Blas-Y-Estrada,
  • Gilles Garric,
  • Cécile Heliès-Toussaint,
  • Marielle Harel-Oger,
  • Corinne Marmonier,
  • Vassilia Théodorou,
  • Françoise Guéraud,
  • Gwénaël Jan,
  • Fabrice Pierre

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41538-024-00273-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

Read online

Abstract The haemoglobin content in meat is consistently associated with an increased risk of colorectal cancer, whereas calcium may play a role as a chemopreventive agent. Using rodent models, calcium salts have been shown to prevent the promotion of haem-induced and red meat-induced colorectal carcinogenesis by limiting the bioavailability of the gut luminal haem iron. Therefore, this study aimed to compare impacts of dietary calcium provided as calcium salts or dairy matrix on gut homoeostasis perturbations by high haeminic or non-haeminic iron intakes. A 3-week intervention study was conducted using Fischer 344 rats. Compared to the ferric citrate-enriched diet, the haemoglobin-enriched diet led to increased faecal, mucosal, and urinary lipoperoxidation-related biomarkers, resulting from higher gut luminal haem iron bioavailability. This redox imbalance was associated to a dysbiosis of faecal microbiota. The addition of calcium to haemoglobin-enriched diets limited haem iron bioavailability and counteracted redox imbalance, with improved preventive efficacy when calcium was provided in dairy matrix. Data integration revealed correlations between haem-induced lipoperoxidation products and bacterial communities belonging to Peptococcaceae, Eubacterium coprostanoligenes group, and Bifidobacteriaceae. This integrated approach provides evidence of the benefits of dairy matrix as a dietary calcium vehicle to counteract the deleterious side-effects of meat consumption.