Bifidobacterium response to lactulose ingestion in the gut relies on a solute-binding protein-dependent ABC transporter

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Abstract

This study aims to understand the mechanistic basis underlying the response of Bifidobacterium to lactulose ingestion in guts of healthy Japanese subjects, with specific focus on a lactulose transporter. An in vitro assay using mutant strains of Bifidobacterium longum subsp. longum 105-A shows that a solute-binding protein with locus tag number BL105A_0502 (termed LT-SBP) is primarily involved in lactulose uptake. By quantifying faecal abundance of LT-SBP orthologues, which is defined by phylogenetic analysis, we find that subjects with 107 to 109 copies of the genes per gram of faeces before lactulose ingestion show a marked increase in Bifidobacterium after ingestion, suggesting the presence of thresholds between responders and non-responders to lactulose. These results help predict the prebiotics-responder and non-responder status and provide an insight into clinical interventions that test the efficacy of prebiotics.

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Yoshida, K., Hirano, R., Sakai, Y., Choi, M., Sakanaka, M., Kurihara, S., … Odamaki, T. (2021). Bifidobacterium response to lactulose ingestion in the gut relies on a solute-binding protein-dependent ABC transporter. Communications Biology, 4(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-021-02072-7

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