Mucin Alterations in Response to High-Fat Diet and the Potential Protective Role of Chickpea Accessions
Donatella Mentino, Daniela Semeraro, Nastasia Taldone, Stefano Pavan, Francesco Caponio, Patrizia Gena, Marianna Ranieri, Grazia Tamma, Marco Vito Guglielmi, Giovanni Scillitani, Stefania Fensore, Maria Mastrodonato

TL;DR
This study shows that a high-fat diet harms the intestinal mucus barrier, but chickpeas, especially one type called MG_13, can help protect it.
Contribution
The study identifies specific chickpea accessions that can partially restore mucin levels disrupted by a high-fat diet.
Findings
A high-fat diet significantly reduced Muc2 expression in the colon.
Chickpea accession MG_13 reduced mucin alterations and restored levels similar to controls.
Chickpeas improved mucin glycosylation, suggesting benefits for mucosal integrity.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Unhealthy nutrition and lifestyles contribute to the development of chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and colorectal cancer. The Western diet can impair gastrointestinal motility and function. The underlying mechanisms that lead to changes in the mucus barrier and mucin profiles in response to these dietary patterns are still being studied. In mice, dietary fiber intake can improve the intestinal mucosal barrier function, enhance the differentiation process of goblet cells, and increase acidic mucin production. Our study aimed to investigate the effects of a high-fat diet (HFD) on colonic mucin expression and to assess whether chickpea accessions, known for their nutritional benefits, can mitigate these adverse effects. Methods: We investigated the effects of an HFD and an HFD associated with two accessions of chickpeas (HFD +…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlycosylation and Glycoproteins Research · Probiotics and Fermented Foods · Microbial Metabolites in Food Biotechnology
