Seaweed Dietary Fiber Sodium Alginate Suppresses the Migration of Colonic Inflammatory Monocytes and Diet-Induced Metabolic Syndrome via the Gut Microbiota

Author:

Ejima Ryuta,Akiyama Masahiro,Sato Hiroki,Tomioka Sawako,Yakabe Kyosuke,Kimizuka Tatsuki,Seki Natsumi,Fujimura Yumiko,Hirayama AkiyoshiORCID,Fukuda ShinjiORCID,Hase Koji,Kim Yun-GiORCID

Abstract

Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a multifactorial chronic metabolic disorder that affects approximately one billion people worldwide. Recent studies have evaluated whether targeting the gut microbiota can prevent MetS. This study aimed to assess the ability of dietary fiber to control MetS by modulating gut microbiota composition. Sodium alginate (SA) is a seaweed-derived dietary fiber that suppresses high-fat diet (HFD)-induced MetS via an effect on the gut microbiota. We observed that SA supplementation significantly decreased body weight gain, cholesterol levels, and fat weight, while improving glucose tolerance in HFD-fed mice. SA changed the gut microbiota composition and significantly increased the abundance of Bacteroides. Antibiotic treatment completely abolished the suppressive effects of SA on MetS. Mechanistically, SA decreased the number of colonic inflammatory monocytes, which promote MetS development, in a gut microbiota-dependent manner. The abundance of Bacteroides was negatively correlated with that of inflammatory monocytes and positively correlated with the levels of several gut metabolites. The present study revealed a novel food function of SA in preventing HFD-induced MetS through its action on gut microbiota.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Takeda Science Foundation

Naito Foundation

Yakult Bio-Science Foundation

Mochida Memorial Foundation for Medical and Pharmaceutical Research

Kaigen Pharma Co., Ltd.

Food Science Institute Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

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