Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Human-origin probiotic cocktail increases short-chain fatty acid production via modulation of mice and human gut microbiome

Ravinder Nagpal, Shaohua Wang, Shokouh Ahmadi, Joshua Hayes, Jason Gagliano, Sargurunathan Subashchandrabose, Dalane W. Kitzman, Thomas Becton, Russel Read, Hariom Yadav

Scientific Reports · 2018 · ▲ 368 citations

Abstract

The gut bacteria producing metabolites like short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs; e.g., acetate, propionate and butyrate), are frequently reduced in Patients with diabetes, obesity, autoimmune disorders, and cancers. Hence, microbiome modulators such as probiotics may be helpful in maintaining or even restoring normal gut microbiome composition to benefit host health. Herein, we developed a human-origin probiotic cocktail with the ability to modulate gut microbiota to increase native SCFA production. Following a robust protocol of isolation, characterization and safety validation of infant gut-origin Lactobacillus and Enterococcus strains with probiotic attributes (tolerance to simulated gastric and intestinal conditions, adherence to intestinal epithelial cells, absence of potential virulence genes, cell-surface hydrophobicity, and susceptibility to common antibiotics), we select 10 strains (5 from each genera) out of total 321 isolates. A single dose (oral gavage) as well as 5 consecutive doses of this 10-strain probiotic cocktail in mice modulates gut microbiome and increases SCFA production (particularly propionate and butyrate). Inoculation of these probiotics in human feces also increases SCFA production along with microbiome modulation. Results indicate that human-origin probiotic lactobacilli and enterococci could ameliorate gut microbiome dysbiosis and hence may prove to be a potential therapy for diseases involving reduced SCFAs production in the gut.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1038/s41598-018-30114-4
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-13 MST

Cite this

APA
Nagpal, R., Wang, S., Ahmadi, S., Hayes, J., Gagliano, J., Subashchandrabose, S., Kitzman, D.W., Becton, T., Read, R., &amp; Yadav, H. (2018). Human-origin probiotic cocktail increases short-chain fatty acid production via modulation of mice and human gut microbiome. <em>Scientific Reports</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-30114-4
Vancouver
Nagpal R, Wang S, Ahmadi S, Hayes J, Gagliano J, Subashchandrabose S, et al. Human-origin probiotic cocktail increases short-chain fatty acid production via modulation of mice and human gut microbiome. Scientific Reports. 2018. doi:10.1038/s41598-018-30114-4.
BibTeX
@article{ravinder2018Humano, title = {Human-origin probiotic cocktail increases short-chain fatty acid production via modulation of mice and human gut microbiome}, author = {Ravinder Nagpal and Shaohua Wang and Shokouh Ahmadi and Joshua Hayes and Jason Gagliano and Sargurunathan Subashchandrabose and Dalane W. Kitzman and Thomas Becton and Russel Read and Hariom Yadav}, journal = {Scientific Reports}, year = {2018}, doi = {10.1038/s41598-018-30114-4}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.