A Mix of Dietary Fibres Changes Interorgan Nutrients Exchanges and Muscle-Adipose Energy Handling in Overfed Mini-Pigs

Author:

Mohamed Ahmed Ben,Rémond Didier,Gual-Grau AndreuORCID,Bernalier-Donnadille Annick,Capel FrédéricORCID,Michalski Marie-Caroline,Laugerette Fabienne,Cohade Benoit,Hafnaoui Noureddine,Béchet DanielORCID,Coudy-Gandilhon CécileORCID,Gueugneau MarineORCID,Salles Jerome,Migné Carole,Dardevet Dominique,David Jérémie,Polakof SergioORCID,Savary-Auzeloux Isabelle

Abstract

This study evaluates the capacity of a bread enriched with fermentable dietary fibres to modulate the metabolism and nutrients handling between tissues, gut and peripheral, in a context of overfeeding. Net fluxes of glucose, lactate, urea, short chain fatty acids (SCFA), and amino acids were recorded in control and overfed female mini-pigs supplemented or not with fibre-enriched bread. SCFA in fecal water and gene expressions, but not protein levels or metabolic fluxes, were measured in muscle, adipose tissue, and intestine. Fibre supplementation increased the potential for fatty acid oxidation and mitochondrial activity in muscle (acox, ucp2, sdha and cpt1-m, p < 0.05) as well as main regulatory transcription factors of metabolic activity such as pparα, pgc-1α and nrf2. All these features were associated with a reduced muscle fibre cross sectional area, resembling to controls (i.e., lean phenotype). SCFA may be direct inducers of these cross-talk alterations, as their feces content (+52%, p = 0.05) was increased in fibre-supplemented mini-pigs. The SCFA effects could be mediated at the gut level by an increased production of incretins (increased gcg mRNA, p < 0.05) and an up-regulation of SCFA receptors (increased gpr41 mRNA, p < 0.01). Hence, consumption of supplemented bread with fermentable fibres can be an appropriate strategy to activate muscle energy catabolism and limit the establishment of an obese phenotype.

Funder

National Research Institute for Agriculture, Food and Environment

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

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