4.6 Article

Influence of 2′-Fucosyllactose on the Microbiota Composition and Metabolic Activity of Fecal Cultures from Breastfed and Formula-Fed Infants at Two Months of Age

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9071478

Keywords

human milk oligosaccharides; 2'-fucosyllactose; microbiota; in vitro model; infants; breastfeeding; Bifidobacterium

Categories

Funding

  1. postdoctoral Juan de la Cierva Contract (Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities) [IJCI-2017-32156]
  2. Biosanitary Research Foundation in Asturias (FINBA, Spain)
  3. Lallemand Health Solutions Inc.
  4. IPLA-CSIC
  5. Intramural CSIC Research project [PIE201970E061]

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The study highlights the impact of HMOs, particularly 2'FL, on the establishment of intestinal microbiota, with the rate of 2'FL degradation being a crucial factor influencing microbiota evolution. Further research is needed to fully understand how early intervention with HMOs may affect the microbiota based on its ability to utilize 2'FL.
Although breast milk is considered the gold standard of nutrition for infant feeding, some circumstances may make breastfeeding difficult. Several commercial milk preparations include synthetic human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) in their composition. However, the effect of HMOs on the establishment of the intestinal microbiota remains incompletely understood. Independent batch fermentations were performed with feces from six full-term infant donors of two months of age (three breastfed and three formula-fed, exclusively) in the presence of 2'fucosyllactose (2'FL), one of the most abundant HMOs in human milk. Microbiota composition was analyzed by 16S rRNA gene sequencing at baseline and at 24 h of incubation. The 2'FL consumption, gas accumulation, and levels of different metabolites were determined by chromatography. Microbiota profiles at baseline were clearly influenced by the mode of feeding and by the intrinsic ability of microbiotas to degrade 2'FL. The 2'FL degradation rate clustered fecal cultures into slow and fast degraders, regardless of feeding type, this being a determinant factor influencing the evolution of the microbiota during incubation, although the low number of donors precludes drawing sound conclusions. More studies are needed to decipher the extent to which the early intervention with HMOs could influence the microbiota as a function of its ability to utilize 2'FL.

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