Evidence for constitutive microbiota-dependent short-term control of food intake in mice: Is there a link with inflammation, oxidative stress, endotoxemia, and Glp-1?

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Ben Fradj, Selma | Nédélec, Emmanuelle | Salvi, Juliette | Fouesnard, Mélanie | Huillet, Marine | Pallot, Gaetan | Cansell, Céline | Sanchez, Clara | Philippe, Catherine | Gigot, Vincent | Lemoine, Aleth | Trompier, Doriane | Henry, Thomas | Petrilli, Virginie | Py, Bénédicte | Guillou, Hervé | Loiseau, Nicolas | Ellero-Simatos, Sandrine | Nahon, Jean-Louis | Rovère, Carole | Grober, Jacques | Boudry, Gaëlle | Douard, Véronique | Benani, Alexandre

Edité par CCSD ; Mary Ann Liebert -

International audience. AIMS: Although prebiotics, probiotics, and fecal transplantation can alter the sensation of hunger and/or feeding behavior, the role of the constitutive gut microbiota in the short-term regulation of food intake during normal physiology is still unclear. RESULTS: An antibiotic-induced microbiota depletion study was designed to compare feeding behavior in conventional and microbiota-depleted mice. Tissues were sampled to characterize the time profile of microbiota-derived signals in mice during consumption of either standard or high-fat food for 1 hour. Pharmacological and genetic tools were used to evaluate the contribution of postprandial endotoxemia and inflammatory responses in the short-term regulation of food intake. We observed constitutive microbial and macronutrient-dependent control of food intake at the time scale of a meal, i.e., within 1 hour of food introduction. Specifically, microbiota depletion increased food intake and the microbiota-derived anorectic effect became significant during the consumption of high-fat but not standard food. This anorectic effect correlated with a specific postprandial microbial metabolic signature and did not require postprandial endotoxemia or an NLRP3 (NOD-, LRR- and Pyrin domain-containing protein 3)-inflammasome mediated inflammatory response. Innovation and Conclusion: These findings show that the gut microbiota controls host appetite at the time scale of a meal under normal physiology. Interestingly, a microbiota-derived anorectic effect develops specifically with a high-fat meal, indicating that gut microbiota activity is involved in the satietogenic properties of foods.

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