Abstract
E.A. SMITH AND G.T. MACFARLANE. 1996. Concentrations of phenolic compounds in human gut contents were more than fourfold higher in the distal colon (6.2 mmol kg ‐1 ) compared to the proximal bowel (1.4 mmol kg ‐1 ). Tryptophan metabolites were never found in more than trace amounts in large intestinal contents and phenol substituted fatty acids were the major products of aromatic amino acid fermentation that accumulated in the proximal colon, whereas phenol and p ‐cresol were more important in the distal gut, accounting for 70% of all products of dissimilatory aromatic amino acid metabolism. In vitro incubations of colonic material showed that phenol was produced most rapidly (1.0 μmol g ‐1 h ‐1 ), whereas indole was formed comparatively slowly (0.06 μmol g ‐1 h ‐1 ). Most probable number (MPN) estimations demonstrated that large populations of phenol and indole producing bacteria occur in the large intestine (range log 10 9.8–11.5 (g dry wt faeces) ‐1 , mean 10.6, N =7). With respect to phenolic compounds, phenylacetate and phenylpropionate producers predominated, while indoleacetate‐forming bacteria were the major tryptophan‐utilizing organisms. Quantitation of products of dissimilatory aromatic amino acid metabolism in MPN tubes showed that phenol and phenylpropionate mainly accumulated at low sample dilutions, whereas phenylacetate, p ‐cresol, indoleacetate and indolepropionate were formed in greatest amounts at high sample dilutions. The significance of pH and carbohydrate availability with respect to aromatic amino acid metabolism was shown in batch culture fermentation studies, where net production of phenolic compounds by mixed populations of intestinal bacteria was reduced by approximately 33% during growth at pH 5.5 compared to pH 6.8, and by 60% in the presence of a fermentable carbohydrate. Experiments with 16 species of intestinal bacteria belonging to six different genera showed that environmental factors such as low pH and high carbohydrate availability markedly reduced dissimilatory aromatic amino acid metabolism in some organisms, but stimulated this process in others. A three‐stage continuous culture model of the colon was used to investigate the effect of system retention time (27.1 or 66.7 h) on aromatic amino acid fermentation. Qualitative and quantitative increases in phenol production occurred from vessel 1 to vessel 3 in this model. Concentrations of phenolic compounds in vessel 3 were three times greater at R =66.7 h compared to R =27.1 h. Phenol and p ‐cresol were not detected in vessel 1, though formation of these metabolites increased from vessel 2 to vessel 3, in a pattern similar to that observed in the distal colon.
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Enumeration of amino acid fermenting bacteria in the human large intestine: effects of pH and starch on peptide metabolism and dissimilation of amino acids
Proteins and trichloroacetic acid-soluble peptides were present in high concentrations in human intestinal contents and faeces. Free amino acids were also detected in millimolar...
Reduced Dietary Intake of Carbohydrates by Obese Subjects Results in Decreased Concentrations of Butyrate and Butyrate-Producing Bacteria in Feces
ABSTRACT Weight loss diets for humans that are based on a high intake of protein but low intake of fermentable carbohydrate may alter microbial activity and bacterial population...
Bile salt biotransformations by human intestinal bacteria
Secondary bile acids, produced solely by intestinal bacteria, can accumulate to high levels in the enterohepatic circulation of some individuals and may contribute to the pathog...
Dielectric Constant and Dielectric Loss of Plastics as Related to Their Composition
Data are presented for the frequency variation of the dielectric constant and dielectric loss factor of various plastics over a broad frequency band extending from 1 kc. to 35 m...
Distribution and Function of Genes Concerned with Aromatic Biosynthesis in <i>Escherichia coli</i>
Pittard, James (School of Microbiology, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), and B. J. Wallace . Distribution and function of genes concerned with aromatic biosynthesi...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1996
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 81
- Issue
- 3
- Pages
- 288-302
- Citations
- 468
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1111/j.1365-2672.1996.tb04331.x