Functional resilience and response to a dietary additive (Kefir) in models of foregut and hindgut microbial fermentation in vitro

Author

de la Fuente Oliver, Gabriel

Jones, Eleanor

Jones, Shann

Newbold, C. Jamie

Publication date

2017-07-04T11:51:00Z

2017-07-04T11:51:00Z

2017-06-28

2017-07-04T11:51:01Z



Abstract

Stability in gut ecosystems is an important area of study that impacts on the use of additives and is related with several pathologies. Kefir is a fermented milk drink made with a consortium of yeast and bacteria as a fermentation starter, of which the use as additive in companion and livestock animals has increased in the last few years. To investigate the effect of kefir milk on foregut and hindgut digestive systems, an in vitro approach was followed. Either rumen fluid or horse fecal contents were used as a microbial inoculate and the inclusion of kefir (fresh, autoclaved, or pasteurized) was tested. Gas production over 72 h of incubation was recorded and pH, volatile fatty acids (VFAs), lactate and ammonia concentration as well as lactic acid (LAB) and acetic acid bacteria, and yeast total numbers were also measured. Both direct and indirect (by subtracting their respective blanks) effects were analyzed and a multivariate analysis was performed to compare foregut and hindgut fermentation models. Addition of kefir boosted the fermentation by increasing molar concentration of VFAs and ammonia and shifting the Acetate to Propionate ratio in both models but heat processing techniques like pasteurization or autoclaving influenced the way the kefir is fermented and reacts with the present microbiota. In terms of comparison between both models, the foregut model seems to be less affected by the inclusion of Kefir than the hindgut model. In terms of variability in the response, the hindgut model appeared to be more variable than the foregut model in the way that it reacted indirectly to the addition of different types of kefir.


This research was supported by the Research and Innovation Project WISE 2 (ID: 80659), funded by the European Regional Development Fund Program. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Microbial stability; Digestive system; Gut fermentation; Kefir

Publisher

Frontiers Media S.A.

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.01194

Frontiers In Microbiology, vol.8, a1194

Rights

cc-by (c) de la Fuente et al., 2017

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es

This item appears in the following Collection(s)