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101. Performance and nutrient digestibility of growing pigs fed highly or low fermentable coarse or finely ground fibre-rich feedstuffs.

102. Gas exchange, rumen hydrogen sinks, and nutrient digestibility and metabolism in lactating dairy cows fed 3-nitrooxypropanol and cracked rapeseed.

103. Relationships between diet and gut microbiome in an Italian and Dutch cohort: does the dietary protein to fiber ratio play a role?

104. Dietary carbohydrates regulate intestinal colonization and dissemination of Klebsiella pneumoniae.

105. Cryptic diversity of cellulose-degrading gut bacteria in industrialized humans.

106. Integration of subcritical water extraction and treatment with xylanases and feruloyl esterases maximises release of feruloylated arabinoxylans from wheat bran.

107. Preparation and Improvement of Physicochemical and Functional Properties of Dietary Fiber from Corn Cob Fermented by Aspergillus niger .

108. Nutritional strategies, performance, digestibility, and carcass traits of Santa Ines and Rabo Largo breeds in a tropical climate.

109. High-level production of a novel alginate lyase (FsAly7) from Flammeovirga sp. for efficient production of low viscosity soluble dietary fiber from sodium alginate.

110. Study on the Digestive Behavior of Chlorogenic Acid in Biomimetic Dietary Fiber and the Antioxidative Synergistic Effect of Polysaccharides and Chlorogenic Acid.

111. Effect of feeding corn silage on semen quality and spermatogenesis of bulls.

112. Dietary fibre fractions rich in (poly)phenols from orange by-products and their metabolisation by in vitro digestion and colonic fermentation.

113. Comparative study on chemical composition, functional properties of dietary fibers prepared from four China cereal brans.

114. High Soluble Fiber Promotes Colorectal Tumorigenesis Through Modulating Gut Microbiota and Metabolites in Mice.

115. Comparative analysis of Chrysoporthe cubensis exoproteomes and their specificity for saccharification of sugarcane bagasse.

116. Effects of dietary fiber and biotic supplementation on apparent total tract macronutrient digestibility and the fecal characteristics, metabolites, and microbiota of healthy adult dogs.

117. Effects of dietary forage neutral detergent fiber and rumen degradable starch ratios on chewing activity, ruminal fermentation, ruminal microbes and nutrient digestibility of Hu sheep fed a pelleted total mixed ration.

118. Rumen fermentation of meal-fed sheep in response to diets formulated to vary in fiber and protein degradability.

119. Effect of different feeding strategies and dietary fiber levels on energy and protein retention in gestating sows.

120. Lactobacillaceae differentially impact butyrate-producing gut microbiota to drive CNS autoimmunity.

121. Gut microbiota determines the fate of dietary fiber-targeted interventions in host health.

122. Effect of rice bran fermented with Ligilactobacillus equi on in vitro fermentation profile and microbial population.

123. Agro-industrial by-products as ruminant feed: Nutritive value and in vitro rumen fermentation evaluation.

124. Catabolic Network of the Fermentative Gut Bacterium Phocaeicola vulgatus (Phylum Bacteroidota) from a Physiologic-Proteomic Perspective.

125. Gut microbial features and dietary fiber intake predict gut microbiota response to resistant starch supplementation.

126. Ruminal degradation characteristics of bagasse with different fermentation treatments in the rumen of beef cattle.

127. Interaction between β-glucans and gut microbiota: a comprehensive review.

128. Recipient microbiome-related features predicting metabolic improvement following fecal microbiota transplantation in adults with severe obesity and metabolic syndrome: a secondary analysis of a phase 2 clinical trial.

129. Different influences of dietary fiber from various sources on the in vitro digestibility of casein as uncovered by the study of protein-dietary fiber interactions.

130. Fecal fermentation behavior and immunomodulatory activity of arabinoxylan from wheat bran.

131. Insoluble dietary fibers: structure, metabolism, interactions with human microbiome, and role in gut homeostasis.

132. Adaptation to tolerate high doses of arabinoxylan is associated with fecal levels of Bifidobacterium longum .

133. Interactive effects of a stimbiotic supplementation and wheat bran inclusion in corn- or wheat-based diets on growth performance, ileal digestibility, and expression of nutrient transporters of broilers chickens.

134. Structural property of extractable proteins and polysaccharides in wheat bran following a dual-enzymatic pretreatment and corresponding functionality.

135. Comprehensive evaluation of the prebiotic properties of Dendrobium officinale polysaccharides, β-glucan, and inulin during in vitro fermentation via multi-omics analysis.

136. Dietary replacement of soybean meal with heat-treated grain soybean in diets of feedlot-finished beef cattle: impacts on intake, digestibility, and ruminal parameters.

137. High Viscosity Slows the Utilization of Rapidly Fermentable Dietary Fiber by Human Gut Microbiota.

138. Effect of glucose infusion on glucose and insulin metabolism in early- and mid-lactation ewes and goats fed diets differing in starch and highly digestible fiber concentration.

139. Standardisation of the C:N ratio in ileal digesta changes relationships among fermentation end-products during in vitro hindgut fermentation in pigs.

140. Use of milk proteins as biomarkers of changes in the rumen metaproteome of Holstein cows fed low-fiber, high-starch diets.

141. Energy and nitrogen utilization of lactating dairy cattle fed increasing inclusion of a high-protein processed corn coproduct.

142. Hazelnut (Corylus avellana L.) shells as a potential source of dietary fibre: impact of hydrothermal treatment temperature on fibre structure and degradation compounds.

143. Effects of soluble glucomannan and insoluble cellulose treatment on mucin secretion and mucin glycosylation-related gene expression in the colons of mice.

144. The feasibility of partial replacement of berseem hay by spent mushroom ( Pleurotus osteratus ) substrate in rabbit diets on growth performance, digestibility, caecum fermentation, and economic efficiency.

145. Feed-food and land use competition of lowland and mountain dairy cow farms.

146. Ability of three dairy feed evaluation systems to predict postruminal outflows of nitrogenous compounds in dairy cows: A meta-analysis.

147. Can conventional forages be replaced with cotton plant (Gossypium hirsutum) wastes in fattening lambs? Laboratory and animal studies.

148. Buckwheat ( Fagopyrum esculentum ) Hulls Are a Rich Source of Fermentable Dietary Fibre and Bioactive Phytochemicals.

149. Addition of soluble fiber to standard purified diets is important for gut morphology in mice.

150. Transcriptomic analysis reveals that non-forage or forage fiber source promotes rumen development through different metabolic processes in lambs.

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