Dietary fibers play a crucial role in shaping the gut microbiome and influencing gastrointestinal (GI) physiology. Grain-based diets (GBDs) are widely used in rodent studies, but their utility is limited due to batch-to-batch variability resulting from inconsistent ingredients. Purified diets (PDs) are composed of only known and refined ingredients and offer a solution to the constraints of GBDs. This study aimed to identify a combination of dietary fibers in a purified diet (PD) that promotes optimal murine gut morphometry and a diverse intestinal microbial community. Male C57BL/6J mice were fed either two grain-based diets (GBDs) or four PDs with varying fiber compositions for 28 days. Mice consuming PDs lacking soluble fiber had more gonadal fat (P < 0.05), shorter small intestines (P < 0.05), and lighter ceca (P < 0.05) compared with those fed the LabDiet 5001 GBD. Increasing the proportion of soluble fibers in PDs progressively reduced microbial diversity in the cecum and colon. Multidimensional scaling analysis revealed distinct microbial communities in the cecum and colon between mice fed GBDs and PDs (P < 0.05). Differential abundance analysis identified relatively more Family XII UCG 001 and less Lactococcus in mice fed GBDs relative to mice consuming PDs (P < 0.05). While no PD recapitulated the gut microbial composition of GBDs, PDs with high soluble fiber content best preserved GI morphometry. These findings underscore the importance of considering diet as an experimental variable and highlight the need for a PD formulation that combines the benefits of GBDs on GI health and microbial richness.
Importance: Dietary fibers are essential for maintaining gut health. Insoluble fibers aid in fecal bulking and water retention while soluble fiber is a fermentative substrate for intestinal microbial communities. Grain-based diets (GBDs) are commonly used in preclinical research but the variability in ingredients across batches impedes reproducibility. Purified diets (PDs), which are composed of highly refined ingredients, pose a potential solution but the most widely used low-fat control PDs contain no soluble fiber. This study intended to identify a PD with a combination of fibers that promotes murine gut health and microbial diversity. A PD with optimal fiber composition would aid in the standardization and reproducibility of studies investigating intestinal physiology and the gut microbiota.
Keywords: fiber; grain-based diets; insoluble fiber; intestinal microbiota; purified diets; soluble fiber.