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Jaboticaba (Myrciaria jaboticaba) powder consumption improves the metabolic profile and regulates gut microbiome composition in high-fat diet-fed mice

Elaine Soares, Aruanna Cajaty Soares, Patrícia Trindade, Elisa Bernardes Monteiro, Fabiane Ferreira Martins, Andrew J. Forgie, Kim Ohanna Pimenta Inada, Graziele Freitas de, Ângela Castro Resende, Daniel Perrone, Vanessa Souza‐Mello, Francisco A. Tómas‐Barberán, Benjamin P. Willing, Mariana Monteiro, Júlio Beltrame Daleprane

2021Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The consumption of a high-fat diet can cause metabolic syndrome and induces host gut microbial dysbiosis and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). We evaluated the effect of polyphenol-rich jaboticaba peel and seed powder (JPSP) on the gut microbial community composition and liver health in a mouse model of NAFLD. Three-month-old C57BL/6 J male mice, received either a control (C, 10% of lipids as energy, n = 16) or high-fat (HF, 50% of lipids as energy, n = 64) diet for nine weeks. The HF mice were randomly subdivided into four groups (n = 16 in each group), three of which (HF-J5, HF-J10, and HF-J15) were supplemented with dietary JPSP for four weeks (5%, 10%, and 15%, respectively). In addition to attenuating weight gain, JPSP consumption improved dyslipidemia and insulin resistance. In a dose-dependent manner, JPSP consumption ameliorated the expression of hepatic lipogenesis genes (AMPK, SREBP-1, HGMCoA, and ABCG8). The effects on the microbial community structure were determined in all JPSP-supplemented groups; however, the HF-J10 and HF-J15 diets led to a drastic depletion in the species of numerous bacterial families (Bifidobacteriaceae, Mogibacteriaceae, Christensenellaceae, Clostridiaceae, Dehalobacteriaceae, Peptococcaceae, Peptostreptococcaceae, and Ruminococcaceae) compared to the HF diet, some of which represented a reversal of increases associated with HF. The Lachnospiraceae and Enterobacteriaceae families and the Parabacteroides, Sutterella, Allobaculum, and Akkermansia genera were enriched more in the HF-J10 and HF-J15 groups than in the HF group. In conclusion, JPSP consumption improved obesity-related metabolic profiles and had a strong impact on the microbial community structure, thereby reversing NAFLD and decreasing its severity.

Topics & Concepts

AkkermansiaLachnospiraceaeGut floraInternal medicineEndocrinologyMetabolic syndromeFatty liverDysbiosisLipogenesisInsulin resistanceDyslipidemiaBiologyFood scienceLactobacillusMedicineObesityLipid metabolismBiochemistryFirmicutesFermentationDiseaseGene16S ribosomal RNAGut microbiota and healthDiet and metabolism studiesLiver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment
Jaboticaba (Myrciaria jaboticaba) powder consumption improves the metabolic profile and regulates gut microbiome composition in high-fat diet-fed mice | Litcius