Increased mucin‐degrading bacteria by high protein diet leads to thinner mucus layer and aggravates experimental colitis
Lulu Chen, Jingyan Wang, Jun Yi, Yajun Liu, Yu Zheng, Shuijiao Chen, Xiaowei Liu
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Westernized high-fat diet increases the risk for inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs), yet with insufficient understanding of the role of high-protein diet. We aimed to identify the effect of high-protein diets from different dietary proteins (casein, whey protein, soy protein) on experimental colitis and its impact on microbiota, structure and function of colonic mucus layer. METHODS: Female BALB/c mice were fed by standard diet, high-casein diet (HCD), high whey protein diet or high soy protein diet for 4 weeks. The susceptibility of dextran sulfate sodium (DSS)-induced colitis in mice and thickness of colonic mucus layer were compared after different dietary interventions, associated with the identification of the reversal effect of broad-spectrum antibiotic intervention (0.5 g/L of vancomycin and 1 g/L of neomycin sulfate, metronidazole and ampicillin in drinking water). Further analysis was performed on the synthesis of mucin, microbiota and sialidase involved in degradation of mucus layer. RESULTS: High-protein diets aggravated acute DSS-induced colitis independent of protein composition, while broad-spectrum antibiotics reversed this effect. HCD significantly altered the composition of bacteria in the colonic mucus layer, especially Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron and total mucin-degrading bacteria; besides, it increased sialidase concentration and reduced the thickness of mucus layer. However, it exhibited no significant effect on the synthesis of Muc2. Broad-spectrum antibiotics decreased the abundance of mucin-degrading bacteria and sialidase concentration while increased the thickness of mucus layer. CONCLUSION: High-protein diet shifts microbial composition and thickness of colonic mucus layer, leading to the aggravation of acute DSS-induced colitis.