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Item Characterisation of the Plasma and Faecal Metabolomes in Participants with Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders.(MDPI (Basel, Switzerland), 2024-12-16) Fraser K; James SC; Young W; Gearry RB; Heenan PE; Keenan JI; Talley NJ; McNabb WC; Roy NC; Fukui HThere is evidence of perturbed microbial and host processes in the gastrointestinal tract of individuals with functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGID) compared to healthy controls. The faecal metabolome provides insight into the metabolic processes localised to the intestinal tract, while the plasma metabolome highlights the overall perturbances of host and/or microbial responses. This study profiled the faecal (n = 221) and plasma (n = 206) metabolomes of individuals with functional constipation (FC), constipation-predominant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-C), functional diarrhoea (FD), diarrhoea-predominant IBS (IBS-D) and healthy controls (identified using the Rome Criteria IV) using multimodal LC-MS technologies. Discriminant analysis separated patients with the 'all constipation' group (FC and IBS-C) from the healthy control group and 'all diarrhoea' group (FD and IBS-D) from the healthy control group in both sample types. In plasma, almost all multimodal metabolite analyses separated the 'all constipation' or 'all diarrhoea' group from the healthy controls, and the IBS-C or IBS-D group from the healthy control group. Plasma phospholipids and metabolites linked to several amino acid and nucleoside pathways differed (p < 0.05) between healthy controls and IBS-C. In contrast, metabolites involved in bile acid and amino acid metabolism were the key differentiating classes in the plasma of subjects with IBS-D from healthy controls. Faecal lipids, particularly ceramides, diglycerides, and triglycerides, varied (p < 0.05) between healthy controls and the 'all constipation' group and between healthy controls and 'all diarrhoea' group. The faecal and plasma metabolomes showed perturbations between constipation, diarrhoea and healthy control groups that may reflect processes and mechanisms linked to FGIDs.Item In Vitro Fermentation of Sheep and Cow Milk Using Infant Fecal Bacteria(MDPI (Basel, Switzerland), 2020-06-17) Ahlborn N; Young W; Mullaney J; Samuelsson LMWhile human milk is the optimal food for infants, formulas that contain ruminant milk can have an important role where breastfeeding is not possible. In this regard, cow milk is most commonly used. However, recent years have brought interest in other ruminant milk. While many similarities exist between ruminant milk, there are likely enough compositional differences to promote different effects in the infant. This may include effects on different bacteria in the large bowel, leading to different metabolites in the gut. In this study sheep and cow milk were digested using an in vitro infant digestive model, followed by fecal fermentation using cultures inoculated with fecal material from two infants of one month and five months of age. The effects of the cow and sheep milk on the fecal microbiota, short-chain fatty acids (SCFA), and other metabolites were investigated. Significant differences in microbial, SCFA, and metabolite composition were observed between fermentation of sheep and cow milk using fecal inoculum from a one-month-old infant, but comparatively minimal differences using fecal inoculum from a five-month-old infant. These results show that sheep milk and cow milk can have differential effects on the gut microbiota, while demonstrating the individuality of the gut microbiome.Item Metabolite profiling of peripheral blood plasma in pigs in early postnatal life fed whole bovine, caprine or ovine milk(Frontiers Media S.A., 2023-09-26) Jena A; Montoya CA; Fraser K; Giezenaar C; Young W; Mullaney JA; Dilger RN; Roy D; McNabb WC; Roy NC; Leroux CRuminants' milk is commonly used for supplying nutrients to infants when breast milk is unavailable or limited. Previous studies have highlighted the differences between ruminants' milk composition, digestion, absorption, and fermentation. However, whether consuming different ruminants' milk impact the appearance of the circulatory blood metabolites in the early postnatal life is not well understood. The analysis conducted here aimed to determine the effect of feeding exclusively whole milk from bovine, caprine or ovine species to pigs, approximately 7 days-old for 15 days, on circulatory blood plasma metabolites. Relative intensities of plasma metabolites were detected using a liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry based metabolomic approach. Seven polar and 83 non-polar (lipids) metabolites in plasma were significantly different (false discovery rate < 0.05) between milk treatments. These included polar metabolites involved in amino acid metabolism and lipids belonging to phosphatidylcholine, lysophosphatidylcholine, sphingomyelin, and triglycerides. Compared to the caprine or bovine milk group, the relative intensities of polar metabolites and unsaturated triglycerides were higher in the peripheral circulation of the ovine milk group. In contrast, relative intensities of saturated triglycerides and phosphatidylcholine were higher in the bovine milk group compared to the ovine or caprine milk group. In addition, correlations were identified between amino acid and lipid intake and their appearance in peripheral blood circulation. The results highlighted that consuming different ruminants' milk influences the plasma appearance of metabolites, especially lipids, that may contribute to early postnatal life development in pigs.
