RS5 Produced More Butyric Acid through Regulating
the Microbial Community of Human Gut Microbiota
Posted on 2021-02-25 - 21:06
The
objective of this research was to compare the in vitro fermentability of three resistant starches (RS2, RS3, and RS5).
Structural analyses showed that there were small changes in the long-
and short-range ordered structure of three RSs after fermentation
by human gut microbiota. The fermentation of RSs by gut microbiota
produced large amounts of short-chain fatty acids, with RS5 producing
more butyric acid and RS3 producing more lactic acid. RS3 and RS5
decreased the pH of the fermentation culture to a greater extent compared
with RS2. Moreover, RS5 increased significantly the relative abundance
of Bifidobacterium, Dialister, Collinsella, Romboutsia, and Megamonas. The results suggested that the form of RS was the main factor affecting
the physiological function of RS and that RS5, as a recently recognized
form of resistant starch, could be a better functional ingredient
to improve health compared with RS2 and RS3.
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Qin, Renbing; Wang, Jin; Chao, Chen; Yu, Jinglin; Copeland, Les; Wang, Shujun; et al. (2021). RS5 Produced More Butyric Acid through Regulating
the Microbial Community of Human Gut Microbiota. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.0c08187