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Influence of Camembert consumption on the composition and metabolism of intestinal microbiota: a study in human microbiota-associated rats

Authors :
Claude Andrieux
Pascale Le Ruyet
Joël Doré
Catherine Juste
Riwanon Lemée
Lionel Rigottier-Gois
Evelyne F. Lhoste
Malène Sutren
Pascale Lepercq
Christophe Lay
UR 0910 PSD Écologie et Physiologie du Système Digestif
Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)
Unité de recherche d'Écologie et Physiologie du Système Digestif (UEPSD)
Recherche et Développement
LACTALIS (LACTALIS NUTRITION)
Source :
British Journal of Nutrition, British Journal of Nutrition, Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2004, 92 (3), pp.429-438. ⟨10.1079/BJN20041192⟩
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
HAL CCSD, 2004.

Abstract

The objective of the present study was to evaluate the consequence of Camembert consumption on the composition and metabolism of human intestinal microbiota. Camembert cheese was compared with milk fermented by yoghurt starters andLactobacillus caseias a probiotic reference. The experimental model was the human microbiota-associated (HM) rat. HM rats were fed a basal diet (HMB group), a diet containing Camembert made from pasteurised milk (HMCp group) or a diet containing fermented milk (HMfm group). The level of micro-organisms from dairy products was measured in faeces using cultures on a specific medium and PCR–temporal temperature gradient gel electrophoresis. The metabolic characteristics of the caecal microbiota were also studied: SCFA, NH3, glycosidase and reductase activities, and bile acid degradations. The results showed that micro-organisms from cheese comprised 105–108bacteria/g faecal sample in the HMCp group.Lactobacillusspecies from fermented milk were detected in HMfm rats. Consumption of cheese and fermented milk led to similar changes in bacterial metabolism: a decrease in azoreductase activity and NH3concentration and an increase in mucolytic activities. However, specific changes were observed: in HMCp rats, the proportion of ursodeoxycholic resulting from chenodeoxycholic epimerisation was higher; in HMfm rats, α and β-galactosidases were higher than in other groups and both azoreductases and nitrate reductases were lower. The results show that, as for fermented milk, Camembert consumption did not greatly modify the microbiota profile or its major metabolic activities. Ingested micro-organisms were able to survive in part during intestinal transit. These dairy products exert a potentially beneficial influence on intestinal metabolism.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00071145 and 14752662
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Nutrition, British Journal of Nutrition, Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2004, 92 (3), pp.429-438. ⟨10.1079/BJN20041192⟩
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a9de57f7e2d7c2a2c856b7c27866ae2e