4.7 Article

Effects of undigested protein-rich ingredients on polarised small intestinal organoid monolayers

Journal

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40104-020-00443-4

Keywords

Alternative protein sources; Casein; Intestinal organoids; Organoids; Soybean meal; Spray dried plasma protein; Transcriptomics; Yellow meal worm

Funding

  1. Wageningen University & Research IPOP Customized Nutrition program [4417801270]
  2. Wageningen University Research
  3. Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs, Agriculture Innovation
  4. graduate school Wageningen Institute of Animal Science (WIAS)
  5. Trouw Nutrition, The Netherlands
  6. Darling Ingredient International, The Netherlands
  7. applied and engineering sciences division of The Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO project) [14935]
  8. DSM Nutritional Products

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Here, we describe the use of monolayers of intestinal epithelial cells derived from intestinal organoids and transcriptomics to investigate the direct effects of dietary protein sources on epithelial function. Mechanically dissociated 3D organoids of mouse duodenum were used to generate a polarized epithelium containing all cell types found in the tissue of origin. The organoid-derived cell monolayers were exposed to 4% (w/v) of 'undigested (non-hydrolysed)-soluble' fraction of protein sources used as feed ingredients [soybean meal (SBM) and casein], or alternative protein sources (spray dried plasma protein, and yellow meal worm), or controls for 6 h prior to RNA isolation and transcriptomics. All protein sources altered expression of unique biological processes in the epithelial cells. Exposure of intestinal organoids to SBM downregulated expression of retinol and retinoid metabolic processes as well as cholesterol and lipid biosynthetic pathways, consistent with the reported hypotriglyceridaemic effect of soy protein in vivo. These findings support the use of intestinal organoids as models to evaluate complex interactions between dietary ingredients and the intestinal epithelium and highlights some unique host effects of alternative protein sources in animal feed and potentially human food.

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