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Low-no-calorie sweeteners exert marked compound-specific impact on the human gut microbiota <i>ex vivo</i>

Pieter Van den Abbeele, Jonas Poppe, Stef Deyaert, Ieva Laurie, Thorsten Klaus Otto Gravert, Anna Abrahamsson, Aurélien Baudot, Kavita Karnik, Davide Risso

2023International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Low-no-calorie sweeteners (LNCS) are used as sugar substitutes as part of strategies to reduce the risk of chronic diseases related to high sugar intake (e.g. type 2 diabetes (T2D)). This study investigated how a range of sweeteners [tagatose (TA)/maltitol (MA)/sorbitol (SO)/stevia (ST)/sucralose (SU)/acesulfame K (ACK)] impact the gut microbiota of T2D subjects and healthy human adults using the ex vivo SIFR® technology (n = 12). The cohort covered clinically relevant interpersonal and T2D-related differences. ACK/SU remained intact while not impacting microbial composition and metabolite production. In contrast, TA/SO and ST/MA were respectively readily and gradually fermented. ST and particularly TA/SO/MA increased bacterial density and SCFA production product-specifically: SO increased acetate (∼Bifidobacterium adolescentis), whilst MA/ST increased propionate (∼Parabacteroides distasonis). TA exerted low specificity as it increased butyrate for healthy subjects, yet propionate for T2D subjects. Overall, LNCS exerted highly compound-specific effects stressing that results obtained for one LNCS cannot be generalised to other LNCS.

Topics & Concepts

SucraloseEx vivoGut floraFood scienceButyrateType 2 diabetesMaltitolPrebioticFermentationChemistrySugarMedicineEndocrinologyBiochemistryDiabetes mellitusIn vitroBiochemical Analysis and Sensing TechniquesDiet, Metabolism, and DiseaseGut microbiota and health
Low-no-calorie sweeteners exert marked compound-specific impact on the human gut microbiota <i>ex vivo</i> | Litcius