Low dietary fiber promotes enteric expansion of a Crohn's disease-associated pathobiont independent of obesity

Although high-fat, high-sugar diets are associated with dysbiotic expansion of E. coli, it is unknown if the content of fat or another dietary component in obesogenic diets is sufficient to promote AIEC expansion.

Here, we found that administration of an antibiotic combined with feeding mice an obesogenic low fiber, high sucrose, high fat diet (HFD) that is typically used in rodent obesity studies promoted AIEC intestinal expansion. Even a short-term (i.e., 1-day) pulse of HFD feeding before infection was sufficient to promote AIEC expansion, indicating that the magnitude of obesity was not the main driver of AIEC expansion.

Controlled diet experiments demonstrated that neither dietary fat nor sugar were the key determinants of AIEC colonization, but that lowering dietary fiber from approximately 13% to 5-6% was sufficient to promote intestinal expansion of AIEC when combined with antibiotics in mice. When combined with antibiotics, lowering fiber promoted AIEC intestinal expansion to a similar extent as widely used HFDs in mice. However, lowering dietary fiber was sufficient to promote AIEC intestinal expansion without affecting body mass.

Our results show that low dietary fiber combined with oral antibiotics are environmental factors that promote expansion of Crohn's disease-associated pathobionts in the gut.

 

Source: journals.physiology.org

 

Santegra® products FortiFi and Cranalon™ contain dietary fiber.

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