2022
DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2022.1070155
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Healthy adult gut microbiota sustains its own vitamin B12 requirement in an in vitro batch fermentation model

Abstract: Vitamin B12 (cobalamin) is present in the human lower gastrointestinal tract either coming from the unabsorbed dietary fraction or from in situ production of the gut microbiota. However, it is unclear whether the gut microbial communities need exogenous B12 for growth and metabolism, or whether B12 in low and high levels could affect gut community composition and metabolite production. Here, we investigated in vitro B12 production of human fecal microbiota and the effects of different levels of B12 (as cyanoco… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Considering this information and our results, one hypothesis is that those prototrophic taxa, such as Veillonella , would help supply cobalamin to auxotrophic taxa during the first months of life. Kundra et al demonstrated that even in the absence of B12, the presence of prototrophic bacteria could supply sufficient cobalamin for the remaining 80% of auxotrophic taxa [ 46 ]. Thus, the presence of Veillonella could help modulate the configuration of the microbiota in the early stages of life.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Considering this information and our results, one hypothesis is that those prototrophic taxa, such as Veillonella , would help supply cobalamin to auxotrophic taxa during the first months of life. Kundra et al demonstrated that even in the absence of B12, the presence of prototrophic bacteria could supply sufficient cobalamin for the remaining 80% of auxotrophic taxa [ 46 ]. Thus, the presence of Veillonella could help modulate the configuration of the microbiota in the early stages of life.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These analogues of B12 are used in diet and dietary supplements and also found in human feces ( 21 , 35 ). B12 forms were tested at two doses, 10 μg/L (1x) and a 20-fold higher dose of 200 μg/L (20x), which are, respectively, two times and 40 times higher than in the medium used for human colon microbiota cultivation ( 16 , 36 ). These concentrations were based on suggested concentrations for cultivating single gut microbes (10 μg/L) ( 33 ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These concentrations were based on suggested concentrations for cultivating single gut microbes (10 μg/L) ( 33 ). In comparison, under normal dietary conditions of 4.5 μg/day, approximately 3.75 μg/L of B12 is expected to reach the colon from dietary sources, which increases to 2,500 μg/L when taking supplements equivalent to a single dose of 1,500 μg/day per tablet ( 16 ). Strains were cultivated in monocultures in BMA and inoculated after cell washing as described above.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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