Butyricicoccus pullicaecorum, a butyrate producer with probiotic potential, is intrinsically tolerant to stomach and small intestine conditions

Butyrate has several beneficial properties that are essential to maintain gastrointestinal health. Therefore butyrate-producing bacteria are seen as the next generation of probiotics. The butyrate-producing bacterium Butyricicoccus pullicaecorum (a clostridial cluster IV strain) is such a promising...

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Published in:Anaerobe Vol. 30; pp. 70 - 74
Main Authors: Geirnaert, Annelies, Steyaert, Alix, Eeckhaut, Venessa, Debruyne, Bo, Arends, Jan B.A., Van Immerseel, Filip, Boon, Nico, Van de Wiele, Tom
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England Elsevier Ltd 01-12-2014
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Summary:Butyrate has several beneficial properties that are essential to maintain gastrointestinal health. Therefore butyrate-producing bacteria are seen as the next generation of probiotics. The butyrate-producing bacterium Butyricicoccus pullicaecorum (a clostridial cluster IV strain) is such a promising probiotic candidate for people suffering from inflammatory bowel disease. To exert its beneficial properties, it is crucial that B. pullicaecorum survives the harsh conditions of the upper gastrointestinal tract to arrive in the colon in a viable and metabolically active state. Before developing a stable formulation of B. pullicaecorum for oral administration, it is important to know its intrinsic acid and bile tolerance. We monitored the survival during and short chain fatty acid production after incubation in conditions simulating the stomach and small intestine using in vitro batch experiments. In case of acid conditions (pH 2 and pH 3), B. pullicaecorum was viable and active but not cultivable. Cultivability was restored during subsequent small intestine conditions. Importantly, bile and pancreatic juice had no lethal effect. Milk, as a suspension medium, only had a protective effect on the cultivability during the first hour at pH 2. B. pullicaecorum was still metabolically active after upper gastrointestinal conditions and produced short chain fatty acids, but a shift from butyrate to acetate production was observed. Although the butyrate-producing anaerobe B. pullicaecorum showed good intrinsic acid and bile tolerance in terms of viability and metabolic activity, colonization efficiency and butyrate production under colon conditions is needed to further evaluate its probiotic potential. •The butyrate-producing Butyricicoccus pullicaecorum has probiotic potential.•We evaluate its tolerance to stomach and small intestine conditions.•Acid conditions induce a viable and active but non-cultivable state.•Cultivability is restored during small intestine conditions.•Stomach and small intestine conditions induce a shift to acetate production.
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ISSN:1075-9964
1095-8274
DOI:10.1016/j.anaerobe.2014.08.010