Gut microbiota promoting propionic acid production accompanies caloric restriction-induced intentional weight loss in cats
J. C. Rowe, J. A. Winston, V. J. Parker, K. E. McCool, J. S. Suchodolski, R. Lopes, J. M. Steiner, C. Gilor, A. J. Rudinsky

TL;DR
This study shows that caloric restriction-induced weight loss in cats is linked to changes in gut bacteria that increase propionic acid production.
Contribution
The study is the first to show a link between propionic acid production and caloric restriction-induced weight loss in cats.
Findings
Cats undergoing caloric restriction experienced significant weight loss.
Fecal propionic acid levels increased during caloric restriction.
Prevotella 9 copri abundance correlated with propionic acid levels.
Abstract
Rodent models and human clinical studies have shown gut microbiota-derived short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) play roles in obesity and insulin resistance. These roles have been minimally explored in cats, where in the USA an estimated 60% of cats are overweight or obese. Overweight/obese research cats (n = 7) were transitioned from a maintenance diet to a reduced calorie diet fed ad libitum for 7 days, then calories were restricted to achieve 1–2% weight loss per week for an additional 77 days. Cats then received their original maintenance diet again for 14 days. Significant intentional weight loss was noted after calorie restriction (adjusted p < 0.0001). 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing and targeted SCFA metabolomics were performed on fecal samples. Fecal microbial community structure significantly differed between the four study phases (PERMANOVA p = 0.011). Fecal propionic acid was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Computational Techniques in Science and Engineering · Advanced Research in Systems and Signal Processing · Transportation Systems and Logistics
