Issue 1, 2024

Presence of digestible starch impacts in vitro fermentation of resistant starch

Abstract

Starch is an important energy source for humans. Starch escaping digestion in the small intestine will transit to the colon to be fermented by gut microbes. Many gut microbes express α-amylases that can degrade soluble starch, but only a few are able to degrade intrinsic resistant starch (RS), which is insoluble and highly resistant to digestion (≥80% RS). We studied the in vitro fermentability of eight retrograded starches (RS-3 preparations) differing in rapidly digestible starch content (≥70%, 35–50%, ≤15%) by a pooled adult faecal inoculum and found that fermentability depends on the digestible starch fraction. Digestible starch was readily fermented yielding acetate and lactate, whereas resistant starch was fermented much slower generating acetate and butyrate. Primarily Bifidobacterium increased in relative abundance upon digestible starch fermentation, whereas resistant starch fermentation also increased relative abundance of Ruminococcus and Lachnospiraceae. The presence of small fractions of total digestible starch (±25%) within RS-3 preparations influenced the fermentation rate and microbiota composition, after which the resistant starch fraction was hardly fermented. By short-chain fatty acid quantification, we observed that six individual faecal inocula obtained from infants and adults were able to ferment digestible starch, whereas only one adult faecal inoculum was fermenting intrinsic RS-3. This suggests that, in contrast to digestible starch, intrinsic RS-3 is only fermentable when specific microbes are present. Our data illustrates that awareness is required for the presence of digestible starch during in vitro fermentation of resistant starch, since such digestible fraction might influence and overrule the evalution of the prebiotic potential of resistant starches.

Graphical abstract: Presence of digestible starch impacts in vitro fermentation of resistant starch

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 May 2023
Accepted
03 Nov 2023
First published
06 Dec 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Food Funct., 2024,15, 223-235

Presence of digestible starch impacts in vitro fermentation of resistant starch

C. E. Klostermann, M. F. Endika, D. Kouzounis, P. L. Buwalda, P. de Vos, E. G. Zoetendal, J. H. Bitter and H. A. Schols, Food Funct., 2024, 15, 223 DOI: 10.1039/D3FO01763J

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