Taurocholic acid adsorption during non-starch polysaccharide fermentation: an in vitro study

  • Gelissen I
  • Eastwood M
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Abstract

The association of radiolabelled taurocholic acid with the solid fraction of a faecal fermentation mixture was measured. A human faecal inoculum was incubated with [24- 14 C]taurocholic acid and several non-starch polysaccharide sources (pectin, wheat bran, ispaghula ( Plantago ovata ) husk and seed), glucose or a substrate-free control. Portions of fermentation mixture were taken at 0, 3, 6, 21 and 24 h and centrifuged to acquire a supernatant fraction and a pellet containing the fermentation residue. 14 C was measured in supernatant fractions and pellets at all time points. Volatile fatty acids (VFA) were measured at 0 and 24 h to confirm bacterial growth. Radioactivity in the pellet increased over time for all substrates. Glucose resulted in the greatest incorporation of taurocholic acid into the pellet, followed by pectin. At 24 h the proportion of the total radioactivity found in the pellet was 92% for glucose, 79% for pectin, 60% for wheat bran, 59% for ispaghula seed, 53% for ispaghula husk and 26% for the control (mean of duplicates). Glucose and pectin produced the greatest quantity of VFA at 24 h. VFA production was highly correlated with radioactivity in the pellet ( r 0·976, P <0·005). These results suggest that the bile acid binding capacity of a faecal culture mixture may be strongly influenced by the fermentability of the available substrate and hence related to bacterial metabolic activity.

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Gelissen, I. C., & Eastwood, M. A. (1995). Taurocholic acid adsorption during non-starch polysaccharide fermentation: an in vitro study. British Journal of Nutrition, 74(2), 221–228. https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn19950125

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