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ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION |
1 From the Childhood Nutrition Research Center, Institute of Child Health, London, United Kingdom (AS, JL, KK, and AL); the Dundee University Gut Group, Ninewells Hospital Medical School, Dundee, United Kingdom (GM and SM); the Leicester General Hospital NHS Trust, Leicester, United Kingdom (AE-J); the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Academic Division of Child Health, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom (TS); the HJ Heinz Company Ltd, Kendal, United Kingdom (PD)
Background: Dietary nucleotides are nonprotein nitrogenous compounds that are thought to be important for growth, repair, and differentiation of the gastrointestinal tract. A higher nucleotide intake may also have favorable effects on the fecal microbial composition and incidence of diarrhea in infancy. However, few studies have tested this hypothesis with an experimental study design.
Objective: We tested the hypothesis that nucleotide supplementation of infant formula has beneficial effects on fecal bacteriology.
Design: Oligonucleotide probes were used to measure bacterial genus-specific 16S ribosomal RNA in stools of a subset of infants (mean age: 20.4 wk) who were randomly assigned to nucleotide-supplemented (31 mg/L; n = 35) or control formula (n = 37) from birth until age 20 wk or were breastfed (reference group; n = 44). The microbial pattern was assessed as the ratio of Bacteroides-Porphyromonas-Prevotella group (BPP) to Bifidobacterium species.
Results: The ratio of BPP to Bifidobacterium spp. rRNA in infants randomly assigned to the nucleotide-supplemented formula was lower than in infants receiving the control formula (mean difference: –118%; 95% CI: –203%, –34%; P = 0.007), but it did not differ in infants who were breastfed. The difference between randomized formula-fed groups was independent of potential confounding factors (P = 0.003).
Conclusions: Our data support the hypothesis that nucleotide supplementation improves the composition of the gut microbiota in formula-fed infants. Because this effect could contribute to previously described benefits of nucleotide supplementation for gastrointestinal tract and immune function, these findings have important implications for optimizing the diet of formula-fed infants.
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R. Sharma, C. Young, M. Mshvildadze, and J. Neu Intestinal Microbiota: Does It Play a Role in Diseases of the Neonate? NeoReviews, April 1, 2009; 10(4): e166 - e179. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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