4.7 Article

Body weight index indicates the responses of the fecal microbiota, metabolome and proteome to beef/chicken-based diet alterations in Chinese volunteers

Journal

NPJ BIOFILMS AND MICROBIOMES
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41522-022-00319-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology of P.R. China (10000 Talent Project)
  2. Jiangsu Innovative Group of Meat Nutrition, Health and Biotechnology

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There is a relationship between meat consumption and gut diseases, with the gut microbiota playing an important role. Hosts with different body weight indexes (BMIs) may respond differently to meat-based diet alterations. Low-BMI volunteers showed greater sensitivity to meat-based diet alterations, while high- and middle-BMI volunteers showed greater sensitivity in fecal proteome profiles and blood indexes. The chicken-based diet decreased inflammation-related blood indexes, particularly in high- and middle-BMI volunteers.
Relationships between meat consumption and gut diseases have been debated for decades, and the gut microbiota plays an important role in this interplay. It was speculated that the gut microbiota and relevant indicators of hosts with different body weight indexes (BMIs) might respond differentially to meat-based diet alterations, since lean and obese hosts have different gut microbiota composition. Forty-five young Chinese volunteers were recruited and assigned to high-, middle- and low-BMI groups. All of the volunteers were given a beef-based diet for 2 weeks and subsequently with a chicken-based diet for another 2 weeks. Body weight and blood indexes were measured, and fecal samples were obtained for 16S rRNA sequencing, metabolome and proteome analyses. The fecal metabolites of the low-BMI volunteers showed greater sensitivity to meat-based diet alterations. In contrast, the fecal proteome profiles and blood indexes of the high- and middle-BMI volunteers indicated greater sensitivity to meat-based diet alterations. Replacing the beef-based diet with the chicken-based diet largely changed operational taxonomic units of Bacteroides genus, and thus probably induced downregulation of immunoglobulins in feces. Compared with the beef-based diet, the chicken-based diet decreased inflammation-related blood indexes, especially in high- and middle-BMI volunteers. This work highlighted the role of BMI as an important factor predicting changes in gut homeostasis in response to meat consumption. Compared with the chicken-based diet, the beef-based diet may induce more allergic and inflammation-related responses in high- and middle- BMI Chinese at the current level.

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