Protein quality and quantity influence the effect of dietary fat on weight gain and tissue partitioning via host-microbiota changes
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Nychyk, OleksandrBarton, Wiley
Rudolf, Agata M.
Boscaini, Serena
Walsh, Aaron
Bastiaanssen, Thomas F.S.
Giblin, Linda
Cormican, Paul
Chen, Liang
Piotrowicz, Yolanda
Derous, Davina
Fanning, Áine
Yin, Xiaofei
Grant, Jim
Melgar, Silvia
Brennan, Lorraine
Mitchell, Sharon E.
Cryan, John F.
Wang, Jun
Cotter, Paul D.
Speakman, John R.
Nilaweera, Kanishka N.
Keyword
high fat intakehigh protein intake
energy metabolism
gut microbiota
adiposity
whey protein
IGF-1
inflammation
body weight and tissue correlation
gut permeability
Date
2021-05-11
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Oleksandr Nychyk, Wiley Barton, Agata M. Rudolf, Serena Boscaini, Aaron Walsh, Thomaz F.S. Bastiaanssen, Linda Giblin, Paul Cormican, Liang Chen, Yolanda Piotrowicz, Davina Derous, Áine Fanning, Xiaofei Yin, Jim Grant, Silvia Melgar, Lorraine Brennan, Sharon E. Mitchell, John F. Cryan, Jun Wang, Paul D. Cotter, John R. Speakman, Kanishka N. Nilaweera, Protein quality and quantity influence the effect of dietary fat on weight gain and tissue partitioning via host-microbiota changes, Cell Reports, Volume 35, Issue 6, 2021, 109093, ISSN 2211-1247, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2021.109093.Abstract
We investigated how protein quantity (10%–30%) and quality (casein and whey) interact with dietary fat (20%–55%) to affect metabolic health in adult mice. Although dietary fat was the main driver of body weight gain and individual tissue weight, high (30%) casein intake accentuated and high whey intake reduced the negative metabolic aspects of high fat. Jejunum and liver transcriptomics revealed increased intestinal permeability, low-grade inflammation, altered lipid metabolism, and liver dysfunction in casein-fed but not whey-fed animals. These differential effects were accompanied by altered gut size and microbial functions related to amino acid degradation and lipid metabolism. Fecal microbiota transfer confirmed that the casein microbiota increases and the whey microbiota impedes weight gain. These data show that the effects of dietary fat on weight gain and tissue partitioning are further influenced by the quantity and quality of the associated protein, primarily via effects on the microbiota.Funder
Science Foundation Ireland; BBSRC; Department of Agriculture, Food and the MarineGrant Number
SFI/16/BBSRC/3389; BB/P009875/1; 16/RC/3835 (to VistaMilk)ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2021.109093
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