Sedentary-related abdominal fat accumulation reduced by administrating heat-treated Bacillus subtilis-derived postbiotic
Mi Wang, Feng He, Weishuang Meng, Zeliang Chen, Huijie Yang, Shi Qi Xu, Dang De Xin, Desheng Li

TL;DR
A postbiotic made from heat-treated Bacillus subtilis reduces abdominal fat in sedentary chicks by altering gut bacteria and lipid metabolism.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel postbiotic application for reducing obesity-related abdominal fat in a sedentary chick model.
Findings
Administering the postbiotic reduced abdominal fat and serum cholesterol and triglyceride levels in chicks.
The postbiotic altered gut microbiota, decreasing Bacteroides and Klebsiella while increasing Streptococcus and others.
Metabolomic analysis showed reduced intestinal phosphatidylcholine and serum 13(S)-HODE levels after treatment.
Abstract
A sedentary lifestyle can induce obesity, characterized by the accumulation of abdominal fat. Due to contemporary breeding practices, developing chicks exhibit increased resting time and decreased locomotor activity, resembling the sedentary lifestyle of humans. Developing chicks often show a substantial accumulation of abdominal fat and possess a digestive tract structure similar to humans. Consequently, they are widely used as experimental animal to study measures for improving intestinal health and reducing abdominal fat accumulation. In this study, we used chicks as experimental animal to investigate the effects of administering heat-treated B. subtilis-derived postbiotic (high-temperature treated B. subtilis) on abdominal fat accumulation, hematology parameters, intestinal microbiota composition, and intestinal contents and serum metabolites composition. A total of 120 day-old…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGut microbiota and health · Animal Nutrition and Physiology · Effects of Environmental Stressors on Livestock
