Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Ingestion of Indigestible Cacao Proteins Promotes Defecation and Alters the Intestinal Microbiota in Mice

2022; Elsevier BV; Volume: 6; Issue: 10 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1093/cdn/nzac129

ISSN

2475-2991

Autores

Jinichiro Koga, Kota Ojiro, Ayumi Yanagida, Takahisa Suto, Hideaki Hiki, Yuki Inoue, Chihiro Sakai, Kohei Nakamoto, Yuta Fujisawa, Ayaka Orihara, Haruka Murakami, Shintaro Hirasawa, Kengo Nakajima, Tomoko Sakazawa, Hisakazu Yamane,

Tópico(s)

Food Chemistry and Fat Analysis

Resumo

In animals, the health effects of ingested cacao proteins are unknown because the proteins are difficult to extract and purify from cacao beans. This study aimed to develop an extraction and purification method for cacao proteins and reveal the effect of ingestion of cacao proteins on defecation and intestinal microbiota in mice. Three groups of mice were fed a control diet (AIN-93 G), a cacao lignin diet (AIN-93 G containing 1.22% cacao lignin), or a cacao protein and lignin diet (AIN-93 G containing 1.97% cacao proteins and 1.22% cacao lignin) by pair-feeding for 8 d. Feces were collected as 2 bulked samples from days 1 to 4 and days 5 to 8 on each diet. The collected feces were weighed and the intestinal microbiota was analyzed by next-generation sequencing-based 16S rRNA. A new extraction and purification method for cacao proteins has been developed, then found that the proteins are resistant to digestive enzymes. However, the cacao protein powder made by this method contained 34.9% of lignin in addition to 56.4% of proteins. Therefore, to reveal the effect by cacao proteins alone, the fecal weight and intestinal microbiota of mice fed the cacao protein and lignin diet were compared with those of mice fed the cacao lignin diet. The fecal weight of mice fed the cacao protein and lignin diet was significantly greater than of mice fed the cacao lignin diet. The relative abundance of Lactococcus and Mucispirillum species in mice fed the cacao protein and lignin diet was significantly higher than in mice fed the cacao lignin diet, but the relative abundance of Anaerotruncus, Oscillospira, and Roseburia species in mice fed the cacao protein and lignin diet was significantly lower than in mice fed the cacao lignin diet. Ingestion of indigestible cacao proteins promoted defecation and altered the intestinal microbiota such as Lactococcus, Mucispirillum, Anaerotruncus, Oscillospira, and Roseburia species in mice.

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