Oat bran but not a ß-glucan-enriched oat fraction enhances butyrate production in the large intestine of pigs

Knud Erik Bach Knudsen, Bent Borg Jensen, Inge Tetens

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Digestibility of polysaccharides and other macronutrients and the metabolic response of the microflora in the large intestine to a low dietary fiber wheat flour diet and three enriched diets with equal amounts of added dietary fiber (oat bran, a β-glucan-enriched oat fraction and insoluble oat residues) were studied in ileal-cannulated pigs. The digestibility of starch was high in the small intestine (98–100%). At this site of the gastrointestinal tract there was also a significant degradation of mixed linked β(1→3; 1→4)-D-glucan (β-glucan) (45–54%), whereas arabinoxylan was quantitatively recovered in ileal effluent. Type and amount of polysaccharides passing the ileal-cecal junction had little effect on the density of microorganism in the large intestine (~1010 viable counts/g digesta) but did have a high impact on the activity of the flora in colon as measured by the concentration of ATP in digesta. The relative proportion of butyrate in the short-chain fatty acids in the luminal contents of the large intestine was 6.6–8.4% when the low dietary fiber wheat flour diet was fed. However, when either oat bran or insoluble residues were included in the diet, the level was raised to 9.3–11.2%. No effect was seen after the addition of the β-glucan-enriched fraction. This study showed that arabinoxylan and not β-glucan in the cell walls of oat bran was responsible for the enhanced butyrate production of oat bran.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Nutrition
Volume123
Issue number7
Pages (from-to)1235-1247
ISSN0022-3166
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1993
Externally publishedYes

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