Science Inventory

Gut metabolic changes during pregnancy reveal the importance of gastrointestinal region in sample collection

Citation:

Moore, M., J. Ford, M. Schladweiler, J. Dye, T. Jackson, AND C. Miller. Gut metabolic changes during pregnancy reveal the importance of gastrointestinal region in sample collection. Metabolomics. Plenum Press, New York, NY, 20(2):40, (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11306-024-02099-x

Impact/Purpose:

Herein, we sought to explore the concept of metabolic regionality in the gut during pregnancy, as we hypothesized it would be different compared to the non-pregnant state.

Description:

Introduction: Studies of gastrointestinal physiology and the gut microbiome often consider the influence of intestinal region on experimental endpoints. However, this same consideration is not often applied to the gut metabolome. Understanding the contribution of gut regionality may be critically important to the rapidly changing metabolic environments, such as during pregnancy. Objectives: We sought to characterize the difference in the gut metabolome in pregnant mice stratified by region—comparing the small intestine, cecum, and feces. Pre-pregnancy feces were collected to understand the influence of pregnancy on the fecal metabolome. Methods: Feces were collected from CD-1 female mice before breeding. On gestation day (GD) 18, gut contents were collected from the small intestine, cecum, and descending colon. Metabolites were analyzed with LC–MS/MS using the Biocrates MetaboINDICATOR™ MxP® Quant 500 kit. Results: Of the 104 small molecule metabolites meeting analysis criteria, we found that 84 (81%) were differentially abundant based on gut region. The most significant regional comparison observed was between the cecum and small intestines, with 52 (50%) differentially abundant metabolites. Pregnancy itself altered 41 (39.4%) fecal small molecule metabolites. Conclusions: The regional variation observed in the gut metabolome are likely due to the microbial and physiological differences between the different parts of the intestines. Additionally, pregnancy impacts the fecal metabolome, which may be due to evolving needs of both the dam and fetus.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:03/09/2024
Record Last Revised:05/23/2024
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 361537