Distinct gut flora profile induced by postnatal trans-fat diet in gestationally bisphenol A-exposed rats

There has been much evidence showing the repercussions of prenatal bisphenol A (BPA) exposure with a postnatal high fat-diet (HFD) on offspring's health. However, the information on how the interaction between these two variables affects the gut microbiome is rather limited. Hence, we investiga...

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Published in:PLOS ONE
Main Authors: Zulkifli, Sarah; Nor, Noor Shafina Mohd; Kadir, Siti Hamimah Sheikh Abdul; Ranai, Norashikin Mohd; Khalil, Khalilah Abdul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001270730100006
author Zulkifli
Sarah; Nor
Noor Shafina Mohd; Kadir
Siti Hamimah Sheikh Abdul; Ranai
Norashikin Mohd; Khalil
Khalilah Abdul
spellingShingle Zulkifli
Sarah; Nor
Noor Shafina Mohd; Kadir
Siti Hamimah Sheikh Abdul; Ranai
Norashikin Mohd; Khalil
Khalilah Abdul
Distinct gut flora profile induced by postnatal trans-fat diet in gestationally bisphenol A-exposed rats
Science & Technology - Other Topics
author_facet Zulkifli
Sarah; Nor
Noor Shafina Mohd; Kadir
Siti Hamimah Sheikh Abdul; Ranai
Norashikin Mohd; Khalil
Khalilah Abdul
author_sort Zulkifli
spelling Zulkifli, Sarah; Nor, Noor Shafina Mohd; Kadir, Siti Hamimah Sheikh Abdul; Ranai, Norashikin Mohd; Khalil, Khalilah Abdul
Distinct gut flora profile induced by postnatal trans-fat diet in gestationally bisphenol A-exposed rats
PLOS ONE
English
Article
There has been much evidence showing the repercussions of prenatal bisphenol A (BPA) exposure with a postnatal high fat-diet (HFD) on offspring's health. However, the information on how the interaction between these two variables affects the gut microbiome is rather limited. Hence, we investigated the impact of a postnatal trans fat diet (TFD) on the gut microbiome of offspring exposed to BPA during the prenatal period in an animal model. Pregnant rats were divided into 5 mg/kg/day BPA, vehicle Tween80 (P80) or control (CTL) drinking water until delivery (N = 6 per group). Then, weaned male pups were further subdivided into three normal diet (ND) groups (CTLND, P80ND, and BPAND) and three TFD groups (CTLTFD, P80TFD, and BPATFD) (n = 6 per group). 180-250 g of faecal samples were collected on days 50 and 100 to assess the composition of the offspring's intestinal flora using next-generation sequencing. The alpha diversity indices of TFD offspring with and without BPA were markedly lower than their ND counterparts (p<0.001-p<0.05). The beta diversity, hierarchical cluster and network analyses of the offspring's microbiome demonstrated that the microbiome species of the TFD group with and without BPA were distinctly different compared to the ND group. Consistently, TFD and ND offspring pairings exhibited a higher number of significantly different species (p<0.0001-p<0.05) compared to those exposed to prenatal BPA exposure and different life stages comparisons, as shown by the multivariate parametric analysis DESeq2. Predictive functional profiling of the offspring's intestinal flora demonstrated altered expressions of genes involved in metabolic pathways. In summary, the gut flora composition of the rat offspring may be influenced by postnatal diet instead of prenatal exposure to BPA. Our data indicate the possibility of perturbed metabolic functions and epigenetic modifications, in offspring that consumed TFD, which may theoretically lead to metabolic diseases in middle or late adulthood. Further investigation is necessary to fully understand these implications.
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
1932-6203

2024
19
7
10.1371/journal.pone.0306741
Science & Technology - Other Topics
gold, Green Published
WOS:001270730100006
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001270730100006
title Distinct gut flora profile induced by postnatal trans-fat diet in gestationally bisphenol A-exposed rats
title_short Distinct gut flora profile induced by postnatal trans-fat diet in gestationally bisphenol A-exposed rats
title_full Distinct gut flora profile induced by postnatal trans-fat diet in gestationally bisphenol A-exposed rats
title_fullStr Distinct gut flora profile induced by postnatal trans-fat diet in gestationally bisphenol A-exposed rats
title_full_unstemmed Distinct gut flora profile induced by postnatal trans-fat diet in gestationally bisphenol A-exposed rats
title_sort Distinct gut flora profile induced by postnatal trans-fat diet in gestationally bisphenol A-exposed rats
container_title PLOS ONE
language English
format Article
description There has been much evidence showing the repercussions of prenatal bisphenol A (BPA) exposure with a postnatal high fat-diet (HFD) on offspring's health. However, the information on how the interaction between these two variables affects the gut microbiome is rather limited. Hence, we investigated the impact of a postnatal trans fat diet (TFD) on the gut microbiome of offspring exposed to BPA during the prenatal period in an animal model. Pregnant rats were divided into 5 mg/kg/day BPA, vehicle Tween80 (P80) or control (CTL) drinking water until delivery (N = 6 per group). Then, weaned male pups were further subdivided into three normal diet (ND) groups (CTLND, P80ND, and BPAND) and three TFD groups (CTLTFD, P80TFD, and BPATFD) (n = 6 per group). 180-250 g of faecal samples were collected on days 50 and 100 to assess the composition of the offspring's intestinal flora using next-generation sequencing. The alpha diversity indices of TFD offspring with and without BPA were markedly lower than their ND counterparts (p<0.001-p<0.05). The beta diversity, hierarchical cluster and network analyses of the offspring's microbiome demonstrated that the microbiome species of the TFD group with and without BPA were distinctly different compared to the ND group. Consistently, TFD and ND offspring pairings exhibited a higher number of significantly different species (p<0.0001-p<0.05) compared to those exposed to prenatal BPA exposure and different life stages comparisons, as shown by the multivariate parametric analysis DESeq2. Predictive functional profiling of the offspring's intestinal flora demonstrated altered expressions of genes involved in metabolic pathways. In summary, the gut flora composition of the rat offspring may be influenced by postnatal diet instead of prenatal exposure to BPA. Our data indicate the possibility of perturbed metabolic functions and epigenetic modifications, in offspring that consumed TFD, which may theoretically lead to metabolic diseases in middle or late adulthood. Further investigation is necessary to fully understand these implications.
publisher PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
issn 1932-6203

publishDate 2024
container_volume 19
container_issue 7
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0306741
topic Science & Technology - Other Topics
topic_facet Science & Technology - Other Topics
accesstype gold, Green Published
id WOS:001270730100006
url https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001270730100006
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