Changes of the Concentration of Short-Chain Fatty Acids in the Intestines of Mice with Different Types of Obesity

We studied the production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) by the intestinal microbiota in mice with obesity caused by a diet and a genetic defect in the leptin receptor gene. In mice, intestinal contents were examined and SCFA were quantitatively assayed by gas chromatography. SCFA concentration in the intestinal contents of mice with alimentary obesity model was significantly lower in the first phase of the experiment (day 14), and the change in their production in dynamics was fundamentally different from this process in the control group (standard diet). The dynamics of the concentration of these metabolites in the model of genetic obesity was similar to that in the control, but the production of SCFA was significantly reduced in mice with leptin resistance in the middle phase (day 60) of the experiment. These findings indicate that the production of SCFA is more influenced by the diet than by leptin resistance.
Source: Bulletin of Experimental Biology and Medicine - Category: Biology Source Type: research