Dietary fiber mitigates the differential impact of beef and chicken meat consumption on rat intestinal health

Abstract

In this rat feeding study, it was hypothesized that the impact of red (vs. white) meat consumption on gut health is more pronounced in fiber-deprived diets, whereas fiber-rich diets may attenuate meat-related differences. For this purpose, rats were fed a red (beef) or white (chicken) meat diet with and without fructo-oligosaccharides (FOS) for three weeks. Gut health was assessed through colonic microbiota, fermentation metabolites, oxidative stress, inflammation, DNA adducts and histology. In rats on the fiber-deprived diets, beef consumption resulted in higher abundance of mucin-degrading bacteria Akkermansia and lower blood glutathione levels compared to chicken-fed rats. Adding FOS to the meat diets modulated the gut microbiota and fermentation metabolites, affected oxidative stress and inflammation markers in tissues and blood, increased colon length, and reduced fat deposition and liver weight. Thus, results showed that the dietary context should be considered when evaluating the impact of red meat consumption on gut health.

Graphical abstract: Dietary fiber mitigates the differential impact of beef and chicken meat consumption on rat intestinal health

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Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Feb 2025
Accepted
26 Mar 2025
First published
22 Apr 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Food Funct., 2025, Advance Article

Dietary fiber mitigates the differential impact of beef and chicken meat consumption on rat intestinal health

N. Elias Masiques, J. De Vrieze, L. Y. Hemeryck, L. Vanhaecke, S. De Smet and T. Van Hecke, Food Funct., 2025, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D5FO00900F

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