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1.
PLoS One ; 18(5): e0284517, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37196002

RESUMEN

Hyaluronan (HA) is a high-molecular-weight glycosaminoglycan and widely distributed in all connective tissues and organs with diverse biological functions. HA has been increasingly used as dietary supplements targeted to joint and skin health for humans. We here first report isolation of bacteria from human feces that are capable of degrading HA to lower molecular weight HA oligosaccharides (oligo-HAs). The bacteria were successfully isolated via a selective enrichment method, in which the serially diluted feces of healthy Japanese donors were individually incubated in an enrichment medium containing HA, followed by the isolation of candidate strains from streaked HA-containing agar plates and selection of HA-degrading strains by measuring HA using an ELISA. Subsequent genomic and biochemical assays identified the strains as Bacteroides finegoldii, B. caccae, B. thetaiotaomicron, and Fusobacterium mortiferum. Furthermore, our HPLC analysis revealed that the strains degraded HA to oligo-HAs of various lengths. Subsequent quantitative PCR assay targeting the HA degrading bacteria showed that their distribution in the Japanese donors varied. The evidence suggests that dietary HA is degraded by the human gut microbiota with individual variation to oligo-HAs components, which are more absorbable than HA, thereby exerting its beneficial effects.


Asunto(s)
Microbioma Gastrointestinal , Ácido Hialurónico , Humanos , Ácido Hialurónico/metabolismo , Pueblos del Este de Asia , Bacterias , Heces/microbiología
2.
Biosci Microbiota Food Health ; 40(4): 204-211, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34631332

RESUMEN

We investigated bacteria that have a nutritional symbiotic relationship with respect to milk oligosaccharides in gut microbiota of suckling rats, with specific reference to sialyllactose (SL) degrading Enterococcus gallinarum. Our next generation sequencing analysis of the colonic contents of 12-day-old suckling rats revealed that almost half of the bacteria in the microbiota belonged to the Lactobacillaceae family. Major Lactobacillus species in the contents were identified as L. johnsonii, L. murinus, and L. reuteri. We then monitored changes in numbers of the above Lactobacillus species, E. gallinarum, and the bacteria belonging to the family Enterobacteriaceae (i.e., enterobacteria) in the colonic contents of infant rats at 7, 12, 21, 28, and 35 days of age by using real-time PCR assays targeting these bacterial groups. The 7-day-old infant rats had a gut microbiota in which enterobacteria were predominant. Such dominance was replaced by L. johnsonii and the concomitant E. gallinarum markedly increased in those of 12 and 21 days of ages. During this period, the number of enterobacteria declined dramatically, but that of L. reuteri surged dramatically. Our separate in vitro experiment showed that supplementation of culture media with SL promoted the growth of L. johnsonii and E. gallinarum, with marked production of lactic acid. These findings revealed possible milk oligosaccharide-mediated cross-feeding between E. gallinarum and L. johnsonii, with the former degrading SL to release lactose to be utilized by the latter.

3.
Biosci Microbiota Food Health ; 40(1): 27-32, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33520566

RESUMEN

We report the isolation of bacteria capable of degrading milk oligosaccharides from suckling infant rats. The bacteria were successfully isolated via a selective enrichment method, in which the serially diluted intestinal contents of infant rats were individually incubated in an enrichment medium containing 3'-sialyllactose (3'-SL), followed by the isolation of candidate strains from streaked agar plates and selection of 3'-SL-degrading strains using thin-layer chromatography. Subsequent genomic and phenotypic analyses identified all strains as Enterococcus gallinarum. The strains were capable of degrading both 3'-SL and 6'-SL, which was not observed with the type strain of E. gallinarum used as a reference. Furthermore, a time-course study combining high-performance anion-exchange chromatography with pulsed amperometric detection revealed that the representative strain AH4 degraded 3'-SL completely to yield an equimolar amount of lactose and an approximately one-fourth equimolar amount of sialic acid after 24 hr of anaerobic incubation. These findings point to a possibility that the enterococci degrade rat milk oligosaccharides to "cross-feed" their degradants to other members of concomitant bacteria in the gut of the infant rat.

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