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Habitual consumption of high-fibre bread fortified with bean hulls increased plasma indole-3-propionic concentration and decreased putrescine and deoxycholic acid faecal concentrations in healthy volunteers

Only 6 to 8 % of the UK adults meet the daily recommendation for dietary fibre. Fava bean processing lead to vast amounts of high-fibre by-products such as hulls. Bean hull fortified bread was formulated to increase and diversify dietary fibre while reducing waste. This study assessed the bean hull:...

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Autores principales: Sayegh, Marietta, Ni, Qian Qian, Ranawana, Viren, Raikos, Vassilios, Hayward, Nicholas J., Hayes, Helen E., Duncan, Gary, Cantlay, Louise, Farquharson, Freda, Solvang, Michael, Horgan, Graham W., Louis, Petra, Russell, Wendy R., Clegg, Miriam, Thies, Frank, Neacsu, Madalina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10551484/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36847278
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0007114523000491
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author Sayegh, Marietta
Ni, Qian Qian
Ranawana, Viren
Raikos, Vassilios
Hayward, Nicholas J.
Hayes, Helen E.
Duncan, Gary
Cantlay, Louise
Farquharson, Freda
Solvang, Michael
Horgan, Graham W.
Louis, Petra
Russell, Wendy R.
Clegg, Miriam
Thies, Frank
Neacsu, Madalina
author_facet Sayegh, Marietta
Ni, Qian Qian
Ranawana, Viren
Raikos, Vassilios
Hayward, Nicholas J.
Hayes, Helen E.
Duncan, Gary
Cantlay, Louise
Farquharson, Freda
Solvang, Michael
Horgan, Graham W.
Louis, Petra
Russell, Wendy R.
Clegg, Miriam
Thies, Frank
Neacsu, Madalina
author_sort Sayegh, Marietta
collection PubMed
description Only 6 to 8 % of the UK adults meet the daily recommendation for dietary fibre. Fava bean processing lead to vast amounts of high-fibre by-products such as hulls. Bean hull fortified bread was formulated to increase and diversify dietary fibre while reducing waste. This study assessed the bean hull: suitability as a source of dietary fibre; the systemic and microbial metabolism of its components and postprandial events following bean hull bread rolls. Nine healthy participants (53·9 ± 16·7 years) were recruited for a randomised controlled crossover study attending two 3 days intervention sessions, involving the consumption of two bread rolls per day (control or bean hull rolls). Blood and faecal samples were collected before and after each session and analysed for systemic and microbial metabolites of bread roll components using targeted LC-MS/MS and GC analysis. Satiety, gut hormones, glucose, insulin and gastric emptying biomarkers were also measured. Two bean hull rolls provided over 85 % of the daily recommendation for dietary fibre; but despite being a rich source of plant metabolites (P = 0·04 v. control bread), these had poor systemic bioavailability. Consumption of bean hull rolls for 3 days significantly increased plasma concentration of indole-3-propionic acid (P = 0·009) and decreased faecal concentration of putrescine (P = 0·035) and deoxycholic acid (P = 0·046). However, it had no effect on postprandial plasma gut hormones, bacterial composition and faecal short chain fatty acids amount. Therefore, bean hulls require further processing to improve their bioactives systemic availability and fibre fermentation.
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spelling pubmed-105514842023-10-06 Habitual consumption of high-fibre bread fortified with bean hulls increased plasma indole-3-propionic concentration and decreased putrescine and deoxycholic acid faecal concentrations in healthy volunteers Sayegh, Marietta Ni, Qian Qian Ranawana, Viren Raikos, Vassilios Hayward, Nicholas J. Hayes, Helen E. Duncan, Gary Cantlay, Louise Farquharson, Freda Solvang, Michael Horgan, Graham W. Louis, Petra Russell, Wendy R. Clegg, Miriam Thies, Frank Neacsu, Madalina Br J Nutr Research Article Only 6 to 8 % of the UK adults meet the daily recommendation for dietary fibre. Fava bean processing lead to vast amounts of high-fibre by-products such as hulls. Bean hull fortified bread was formulated to increase and diversify dietary fibre while reducing waste. This study assessed the bean hull: suitability as a source of dietary fibre; the systemic and microbial metabolism of its components and postprandial events following bean hull bread rolls. Nine healthy participants (53·9 ± 16·7 years) were recruited for a randomised controlled crossover study attending two 3 days intervention sessions, involving the consumption of two bread rolls per day (control or bean hull rolls). Blood and faecal samples were collected before and after each session and analysed for systemic and microbial metabolites of bread roll components using targeted LC-MS/MS and GC analysis. Satiety, gut hormones, glucose, insulin and gastric emptying biomarkers were also measured. Two bean hull rolls provided over 85 % of the daily recommendation for dietary fibre; but despite being a rich source of plant metabolites (P = 0·04 v. control bread), these had poor systemic bioavailability. Consumption of bean hull rolls for 3 days significantly increased plasma concentration of indole-3-propionic acid (P = 0·009) and decreased faecal concentration of putrescine (P = 0·035) and deoxycholic acid (P = 0·046). However, it had no effect on postprandial plasma gut hormones, bacterial composition and faecal short chain fatty acids amount. Therefore, bean hulls require further processing to improve their bioactives systemic availability and fibre fermentation. Cambridge University Press 2023-11-14 2023-02-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10551484/ /pubmed/36847278 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0007114523000491 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sayegh, Marietta
Ni, Qian Qian
Ranawana, Viren
Raikos, Vassilios
Hayward, Nicholas J.
Hayes, Helen E.
Duncan, Gary
Cantlay, Louise
Farquharson, Freda
Solvang, Michael
Horgan, Graham W.
Louis, Petra
Russell, Wendy R.
Clegg, Miriam
Thies, Frank
Neacsu, Madalina
Habitual consumption of high-fibre bread fortified with bean hulls increased plasma indole-3-propionic concentration and decreased putrescine and deoxycholic acid faecal concentrations in healthy volunteers
title Habitual consumption of high-fibre bread fortified with bean hulls increased plasma indole-3-propionic concentration and decreased putrescine and deoxycholic acid faecal concentrations in healthy volunteers
title_full Habitual consumption of high-fibre bread fortified with bean hulls increased plasma indole-3-propionic concentration and decreased putrescine and deoxycholic acid faecal concentrations in healthy volunteers
title_fullStr Habitual consumption of high-fibre bread fortified with bean hulls increased plasma indole-3-propionic concentration and decreased putrescine and deoxycholic acid faecal concentrations in healthy volunteers
title_full_unstemmed Habitual consumption of high-fibre bread fortified with bean hulls increased plasma indole-3-propionic concentration and decreased putrescine and deoxycholic acid faecal concentrations in healthy volunteers
title_short Habitual consumption of high-fibre bread fortified with bean hulls increased plasma indole-3-propionic concentration and decreased putrescine and deoxycholic acid faecal concentrations in healthy volunteers
title_sort habitual consumption of high-fibre bread fortified with bean hulls increased plasma indole-3-propionic concentration and decreased putrescine and deoxycholic acid faecal concentrations in healthy volunteers
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10551484/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36847278
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0007114523000491
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