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Whole milk increases intestinal ANGPTL4 expression and excretion of fatty acids through feces and urine Søren Drud Nielsen, Bashar Amer, Karoline Blaabjerg, Trine Kastrup Dalsgaard, Randi Jessen, Bjørn Petrat-Melin, Martin Krøyer Rasmussen, Hanne Damgaard Poulsen, and Jette Feveile Young J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.6b04135 • Publication Date (Web): 22 Dec 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on January 2, 2017
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Whole milk increases intestinal ANGPTL4 expression and excretion of fatty acids through feces and urine Søren Drud Nielsen1*, Bashar Amer1*, Karoline Blaabjerg2, Trine K. Dalsgaard1, Randi Jessen1, Bjørn Petrat-Melin1, Martin Krøyer Rasmussen1, Hanne D. Poulsen2, Jette F. Young1 1
Department of Food Science, Aarhus University, Denmark
2
Department of Animal Science, Aarhus University, Denmark
*these authors contributed equally to the work.
Corresponding authors: Tel: +4587158051; Fax: +4587154891; E-mail:
[email protected] Tel: +4587157998; Fax: +4587154891; E-mail:
[email protected] 1 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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ABSTRACT
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The angiopoietin-like 4 (ANGPLT4) protein is involved in lipid metabolism and is known to
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inhibit lipoprotein lipase in the blood stream. We investigated the effect of milk on intestinal
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ANGPTL4 and metabolic profile of growing pigs and the effect of free fatty acids (FFA) on
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ANGPTL4 in ex vivo and in vitro assays. Feeding pigs whole milk increased intestinal
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ANGPTL4 mRNA and increased fecal excretion of long chain FFA compared to the control
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group fed soybean oil (n=9). Furthermore, FFA (C4-C8) induced ANGPTL4 gene expression in
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porcine intestinal tissue mounted in Ussing chambers and ANGPTL4 protein secretion to both
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the apical and basolateral side of intestinal Caco-2 cells on permeable membranes. Altogether,
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these results support an ANGPTL4 induced secretion of fecal FFAs. Urinary levels of FFA (C4-
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C12), 3-hydroxyadipic acid and suberic acid were also increased by milk consumption indicating
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higher energy expenditure compared to the control group.
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INTRODUCTION
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Obesity is a negative consequence of an energy dense diet and is linked to increased risk of
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developing cardiovascular diseases.1 Nutritional guidelines recommend limiting intake of
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saturated fatty acids (FA), such as animal fat including milk fat.2, 3 However, in several studies
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milk consumption has been associated with decreased risk of becoming obese, though
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conclusions are not equivocal.4, 5 Some milk intervention studies found no positive correlation
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between milk intake and obesity,4 but rather showed an inverse relationship between high-fat
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dairy consumption and adiposity.6
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Milk fat contains a high level of saturated FA with various chain length (C4-C18) and
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esterification.7, 8 Exceptionally, milk fat contains high amounts of the short chain FA, butyrate,
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and it is one of the few food sources of medium chain FA.7, 9 Studies on rodents suggest that
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butyrate can protect against diet induced obesity,10, 11 while medium chain FA have been shown
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to decrease obesity and positively affect lipid metabolism due to increased thermogenesis and fat
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oxidation.12
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Recently, we showed the potential of milk fat and intact casein to up-regulate angiopoietin-like 4
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(ANGPTL4) gene expression when added to human intestinal cells in vitro.13 The free fatty acids
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(FFA) of the milk were identified as the major inducers14 and confirm previous studies showing
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that FFAs induce ANGPTL4 gene expression in several different intestinal cell lines.15, 16
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ANGPTL4 inhibit lipoprotein lipase in the blood stream17, 18 and is suggested to act as a signal
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protein released from adipocytes and other tissues causing a decreased lipid uptake and increased
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fat metabolism.19 Hence, decreased levels of ANGPTL4 in the blood is associated with increased
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bodyweight, increased circulating FFA, and increased waist-to-hip ratio, strongly suggesting a
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role of ANGPTL4 in fat storage.20 Furthermore, studies have suggested that an increased
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intestinal ANGPTL4 may result in a reduction of adipocyte-associated lipoprotein lipase activity,
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thus limiting uptake of FFAs by the adipose tissue.17 Recent results further indicate that
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ANGPTL4 inhibits the pancreatic lipase in the intestinal lumen as ANGPTL4 (-/-) knock-out
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mice show higher levels of triglycerides (TG) in the gut than normal mice.18 Furthermore, milk
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inhibited the uptake of dietary fat, which was ascribed to the high calcium content. However,
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dairy calcium seemed more efficient than non-dairy calcium indicating that other inducers of fat
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excretion may be present in milk.21, 22 Thus, the excretion of FA after milk intake may be a
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combined calcium- and ANGPTL4 effect and short and medium chain FA in milk seemed to be
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essential as they are more potent inducers of ANGPLT4 gene expression compared to longer
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chain FA.14
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The present study investigates the effects of whole milk in a dietary intervention compared to a
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control diet containing soybean oil using pigs as a model for humans. ANGPTL4 gene expression
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of intestinal tissue and metabolite profile of the blood, urine and feces were investigated as well
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as FFA of feces and urine. For specific investigation of short and medium chain FFA on
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ANGPTL4 gene expression and mode of action, dissected pig intestinal tissue23 and the intestinal
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Caco-2 cell line were used as a models.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Materials. Methanol and heptane were purchased from Rathburn Chemicals Ltd., Walkerburn
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Scotland, UK, and methoxamine hydrochloride from Alfa Aesar GmbH, Karlsruhe, Germany.
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Pyridine, anhydrous ethanol, ethyl chloroformate (ECF), butyric acid, linoleic acid and linolenic
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acid standards, hexanoic acid-d11 (98%) internal standard, phosphate buffered saline (PBS) and
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trimethylsilyl cyanide from Sigma-Aldrich CHEMIE GmbH, Steinheim, Germany. Caproic acid,
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caprylic acid, capric acid, lauric acid, myristic acid, palmitic acid, stearic acid and oleic acid 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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standards came from Fluka Chemie GmbH (Buchs, Switzerland). Myo-inositol-d6 (98%), citric-
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2,2,4,4-d4 acid (98%), butyric acid-d7 (98%), octanoic acid-d15 (98%), decanoic acid-d19
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(98%), lauric acid-d23 (98%), myristic acid-d27 (98%), palmitic acid-d31 (98%) and stearic
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acid-d35 (98%) internal standards were obtained from Cambridge Isotope Laboratories, Inc.
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Andover, MA, USA.
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Chloroform from Chem Solute (Renningen, Germany), and sodium hydroxide from J. T. Baker
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(Deventer, The Netherlands). Ultra-pure water came from a Milli-Q system, Millipore SAS
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(Molsheim, France) and anhydrous sodium sulphate was from Merck (Darmstadt, Germany).
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Approvals. The Danish Animal Experiments Inspectorate, the Danish Ministry of Justice,
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Copenhagen, Denmark, approved the experimental protocols for the three experiments with pigs.
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Dietary intervention with whole milk (Exp. 1). In total, 18 crossbred pigs
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(Landrace*Yorkshire*Duroc) comprising nine litters of two pigs each were used. The pigs were
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reared at a commercial farm, weaned at day 28 of age and transported to the research facilities at
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Aarhus University, Foulum, where they were fed a standard pig diet based on barley, wheat,
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soybean meal and rape cake for 11 weeks prior to the experimental period. During the
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experimental period, the pigs with an initial body weight of 46.9 ± 5.6 kg were individually
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housed in pens with visual and physical contact to neighboring pigs and ad libitum access to
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water. The littermates were fed one of the two experimental diets twice a day for three weeks
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after which the pigs were deprived of feed 18 h before slaughter. The composition of the two
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diets is shown in Table S1. The control diet was optimized according to the Danish
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recommendations for pigs between 65 and 105 kg for all nutrients.24 The milk-based diet was
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similar to control diet apart from replacing soybean oil with full fat milk (Lærkevang, 3.5% fat,
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Arla, Denmark) mixed with the solid part of the diet at feeding. The pigs were fed restrictively 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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and the feeding level in the first week (control diet: 1.76 kg feed/day; milk diet: 1.71 kg feed/day
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+ 0.66 kg milk/day) was increased by 17 and 33% in the second and third week, respectively.
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One pig fed the control diet was omitted from the experiment due to hernia. All of the remaining
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pigs stayed healthy and none of them had feed refusals.
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Upon termination, samples of adipose tissue, muscle, liver, and pancreas were taken and
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immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen. Blood serum, feces and urine were collected the day prior
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to the dietary intervention, and on the day the experiment was terminated. The blood samples
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were allowed to coagulate for 30 min at room temperature, and thereafter centrifuged at room
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temperature at 1700 x g for 10 min. Urine, serum and fecal samples were homogenized and
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stored at -80 °C until analysis. Stripped live epithelium from the proximal part of the ileum were
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washed with ice cold PBS six times, and transferred to a 15 mL tube with 10 mL cell recovery
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solution (BD Bioscience, Albertslund, Denmark) and incubated on ice for 1 h. Subsequently,
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each tissue piece was transferred to a petri dish and the upper cell layer was carefully scraped
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with a flexible inoculation loop. The cell recovery solution containing the free floating cells from
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the tissue was transferred to a 15 mL tube on ice and incubated for 30 min. Afterwards PBS was
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added to a total volume of 15 mL, and centrifuged at 350 x g for 5 min at 4 °C. Cells were
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washed three times in PBS and then lysed in 350 µL lysis buffer from the RNeasy minikit
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(Qiagen, Copenhagen, Denmark). The cell lysate was vortexed for 30 sec and stored at -80 °C
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until RNA purification. Serum concentrations of total cholesterol (TC), HDL-cholesterol (HDL-
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C), LDL-C and TG were measured on a Pentra 400 analyser (HORIBA ABX, Montpellier,
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France) as previously described.25
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Ussing chamber experiment (Exp. 2). Prior to the Ussing chamber experiment, we
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investigated the constitutive expression of ANGPTL4 along the pig small intestine. Three female 6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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pigs weighing 49 ± 2 kg were terminated as described in Exp. 1. The pigs were crossbreeds and
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reared at the same commercial unit as the pigs in Exp. 1. Six samples were taken from the small
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intestine by removing a 10 cm piece of the intestine. The length of the small intestine was 15.1 ±
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0.1 m and samples were taken as follows: sample 1 at 20 cm posterior to the pylorus and samples
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2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 every 3 m so that sample 6 was taken 20 cm anterior to the ileal-caecal junction.
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Intestinal epithelium cell lysate was obtained as described in Exp. 1 and stored at -80 °C until
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RNA purification.
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For the Ussing chamber experiment, four female pigs weighing 47 ± 1 kg were fed a standard
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diet optimized according to the Danish recommendations for all nutrients. Pigs were deprived of
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feed 19 h before slaughtering. Immediately after slaughtering, the small intestine (17 ± 3 m) was
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removed and 150 cm of the distal part (300 cm anterior to the ileal-caecal junction) was collected
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and placed in an oxygenated and phosphate-buffered Ringer solution (25 mM NaHCO3, 120 mM
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NaCl, 1.0 mM MgSO4, 6.3 mM KCl, 2.0 mM CaCl, 0.32 mM phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) and 16
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mM glucose) preheated to 38 °C. Within 15 min, the epithelium was stripped of the muscle
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layers and mounted onto eight Ussing chambers with an opening area of 1.995 cm2 (WPI,
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Sarasota, FL, USA). Fifteen mL aerated (95% O2 and 5% CO2) Ringer solution was used as
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bathing medium on the mucosal and serosal sides.26 The Ringer solution at the mucosal side
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contained equal amounts of sodium salts of butyrate, caproate and caprylate to a total
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concentration of 0, 3 or 9 mM (chamber concentration) while the Ringer solution at the serosal
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side contained the same amount of mannitol (chamber concentration), respectively, to keep
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osmolality equal on the two sides. Two chambers were controls without FFA whereas three
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chambers each contained 3 or 9 mM FFA. Thirty min. after mounting of the epithelium, the
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Ringer solution was replaced by an identical solution. Hence, the tissue was exposed to FFA for
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3 h, however, the transport of FFA over the tissue was measured in the Ringer solution incubated
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with the tissue for 2.5 h. The difference in the electrical potential (Pd, mV) over the epithelium
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was measured in open circuit at 1, 2 and 2.5 h after mounting. The remaining time the Pd was
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clamped to 0 mV by an external current called short-circuit current (Isc, µA) and the epithelial
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conductance (G), was calculated from Isc and Pd using Ohm’s law. To test the viability of the
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tissue, 2.27 mM theophylline (chamber concentration), a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, was added
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bilaterally to all chambers to measure the cAMP-dependent Cl- secretion of the intestine after 3
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h. The increase in Isc due to theophylline addition (∆Isctheo) was calculated by subtracting the
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basal Isc measured 5 min before stimulation from the peak Isc 15 min after stimulation. At 3 h of
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incubation, the Ringer solution from both sides was sampled for FFA analyses. The epithelium
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was gently removed from the chambers and a heterogenic population of epithelial cells was
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scraped off as described in the previous section.
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Caco-2 trans-well experiment (Exp. 3). Culture conditions and trans-well studies on the human
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intestinal cell line Caco-2 (ATCC, HTB-37) were conducted as described previously.27 Briefly,
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cells were seeded in 24 well plates at a density of 6.5 × 104 cells cm-2 for the ANGPTL4 gene
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expression assays. For the protein secretion assays combined with ANGPLT4 gene expression,
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Caco-2 cells were grown on permeable membranes (0.4 µm PCF, Millicell, Hellerup, Denmark)
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placed in a 24 well plate, with 600 µL culture medium on the basolateral side and 400 µL on the
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apical side. Cells where left in culture for 21 days to differentiate with change of culture medium
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every 2-3 days.28 Transepithelial resistance and lucifer yellow passage were monitored as
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evidence of monolayer integrity.27 After 21 days, culture medium was changed on the apical side
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to treatment sample and incubated for 24 h at 37 °C. After 24 h the culture medium from the
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apical and basolateral sides were collected into individual tubes and stored at -80 °C until 8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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analysis. The cells were lysed with 350 µL lysis buffer (RNeasy Mini Kit, Qiagen) and stored at
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-80 °C until RNA-purification. Monolayers were exposed for 24 h to 9 mM of either the single
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FFA butyrate, caproate or caprylate or a FFA-mix of these in culture medium. Differentiated
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Caco-2 cells on permeable membranes were added 3 or 9 mM butyrate or caprylate to determine
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ANGPTL4 gene induction and protein secretion to either the apical or basolateral side of the cell
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monolayer. A cell viability assay based on the activity of a cellular oxidoreductase (wst-1) was
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used to verify no significant reduction in the viability of cells.
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ANGPTL4 expression (real-time PCR). RNA purification, reverse transcription and
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quantification of the relative amount of cDNA from all three experiments were conducted
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according to Nielsen et al. (2014). The sequences of forward primers, reverse primers and
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hydrolysis probes were as follows; Porcine ANGPTL4 5’TCTCTGGTGGTTGGTGGTTTG’3,
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5’GCTGCCGAGGGATGGAAT’3 and 5’CCACTCCAACCTCAATGGCCAGTACTTC’3,
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Human ANGPTL4; 5’GACCCGGCTCACAATGTCA’3,
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5’ATCTTGCAGTTCACCAAAAATGG’3 and 5’TGCACCGGCTGCCCAGGG’3, β-actin; 5’
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ACCCAGATCATGTTCGAGACCTT’3, 5’TCACCGGAGTCCATCACGAT’3,
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5’CTGTATGCCTCTGGCCGCACCA3.
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ANGPTL4 protein. ANGPTL4 protein levels in the culture medium from Caco-2 cells grown
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on permeable membranes from Exp. 3 were determined using a sandwich enzyme-linked
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immunoabsorbent assay as described previously. 14, 29
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Metabolomics. Sample preparation. Frozen fecal, serum and urine collected from Exp. 1 were
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thawed in an ice bath, 80% methanol extraction was performed on samples followed by
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trimethylsilyl derivatization as described in supplementary material.
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GC-ToF MS analysis. The samples (1 µL aliquot) were injected in a 1:40 split mode into an
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Agilent Technologies 7890B gas chromatography system coupled to an Agilent Technologies
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7200 Accurate-Mass Q-ToF mass spectrometer (Agilent Technologies, Germany). Separation of
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the metabolites was performed on a HP-5MS capillary column coated with polyimide (20 m,
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0.180 mm i.d., 0.18 µm film thickness; Agilent Technologies). The initial temperature of the
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oven was held at 60 ºC for 2 min, ramped to 320 ºC at a rate of 30 ºC min-1 and then held at 320
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ºC for 2 min. Helium was used as carrier gas at a constant flow rate of 1 mL min-1 through the
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column. The temperatures of the ion source and injector were 230 and 300 ºC, respectively. The
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mass spectral analysis was performed in scan mode with a quadruple temperature of 150 ºC and
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a fragmentation voltage of 70 eV with a solvent delay of 2.00 min. Mass detector was switched
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off not to detect the urea peak at 5.1-5.6 min. Samples from the two diet groups and from before
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and after intervention were randomly analyzed.
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Free fatty acids quantification. Quantification of FFA in blood, urine and feces from Exp. 1 as
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well as from the Ringer solution of the Ussing chamber experiment (Exp. 2) was performed
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using the ECF-FFA method described by Amer et al. (2013) with modification for feces as
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described by Amer et al. (2015).30 Three out of six urine samples in each group were excluded
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from the analysis due to contamination with feces either in samples drawn before or after the
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intervention. Epithelial transport rates of FFA measured in the Ussing chambers were calculated
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as follows:
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Mucosal clearance (MD) = Cmuc(0) – Cmuc(2.5)
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Cmuc(0) = [FFA] (mmol/L) on mucosa side, immediately after replacing the Ringer solution
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Cmuc(2.5) = [FFA] (mmol/L) on mucosa side after 2.5 h
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Serosal release (SR) = Cser(2.5) - Cser(0)
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Cser(0) = [FFA] (mmol/L) on serosa side, immediately after replacing the Ringer solution
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Cser(2.5) = [FFA] (mmol/L) on serosa side after 2.5 h
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The clearance of FFA at the mucosal side and was not recovered at the serosal side, is assumed
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to constitute tissue content and metabolized loss (TM). TM = MD - SR
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Statistical analysis. Statistical analysis of gene expressions, protein concentrations and blood
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lipids was performed in R 2.14.0 software with linear mixed models adjusted for multiple
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comparisons using Tukey’s HSD Post Hoc to compare the values between treatments.
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Ussing chamber experiment. Measurements of the electrophysiological parameters (Pd, Isc, G
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and ∆Isctheo) were analyzed by the MIXED procedure in SAS. Treatment differences were
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separated by the PDIFF option. Data on Pd, Isc, and G were analyzed by a model containing the
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fixed effects of FFAs concentration, incubation time, and their interaction. Pig and pig x
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intestinal piece x chamber were considered as random factors. Incubation time within pig x
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intestinal piece x chamber was used as repeated measure. The results on ∆Isctheo were analyzed
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by a model containing the fixed effects of FFA concentration. Pig and pig x intestinal piece were
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considered as random factors.
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Intervention study. Animal performance data were analyzed by a model containing diet as fixed
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effect (control or milk) and the initial weight as covariate. Litter was the random variable. FFA
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changes for each pig was analyzed by analysis of variance.
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GC-ToF MS metabolomics data. Raw GC-ToF MS data were deconvoluted using Mass Hunter
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Unknown Analysis software (Quantitative Analysis, Version B.07.00/Build 7.0.457.0, Agilent
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Technologies), detected components from all samples were transferred into Mass Profiler
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Professional software (Version 12.6.4-Build 196252, Agilent Technologies) for retention time
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alignment, peaks filtration and metabolites identification using NIST11 library. Data sets were
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normalized by dividing features over the sum of all features of each observation after removing
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background peaks from column material, solvents and derivatization reagents.
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After processing, integrated peak areas for the detected features, data were imported to SIMCA
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14.0 32-bits (Umetrics, Sweden) for multivariate data analysis. Before statistical analysis, data
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were visually examined for outliers (Hotelling’s T2 value > 95% confidence limit) in principal
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component analysis (PCA). Both PCA and orthogonal partial least squares discriminant analysis
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(OPLS-DA) were applied to develop compliance models based on the most discriminative
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features detected in serum, urine and feces. Models were calculated for the whole data set and for
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different subsets of the samples according to time point of sample collection or diet group. Data
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was auto scaled (unit variance scaling), and the dietary patterns and/or time point were given as
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class information in the OPLS-DA models. OPLS-DA models were cross-validated to evaluate
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the performance of the models. The importance of the variables for the projection values, which
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summarize the overall contribution of each X-variable to the PLS model, were used to select
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metabolites for univariate data analysis when comparing different groups or different time
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points. Univariate data analysis was done on metabolites selected from multivariate data analysis
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using R software. Internal standards peaks were used to normalize GC-MS data before analysis
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for higher accuracy.31
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RESULTS
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Dietary intervention with whole milk (Exp. 1). The control and milk diets were balanced for
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energy and lipid content, whereas the protein content of the milk diet was higher resulting in a
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higher daily protein intake of 8% for pigs fed the milk diet compared to the control diet.
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Consequently, pigs fed the milk diet tended to have a higher finishing weight and average daily
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gain (ADG) and a lower feed conversion ratio (FCR) compared with pigs fed the control diet
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(Table 1).
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The constitutive gene expression of ANGPTL4 in different tissues of the pigs fed the control diet
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was investigated and revealed the highest expression in the adipose tissue, followed by the liver,
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small intestine and muscle while ANGPTL4 mRNA could not be detected in pancreas [average
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Ct values: 24.4, 25.1, 27.3 and 29.6, respectively]. The ANGPTL4 gene expression in different
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tissues from the pigs fed the milk diet revealed no differences in muscle, liver or fat tissue, while
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ANGPTL4 gene expression of the small intestine was significantly increased 2.5 fold by the milk
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diet compared to the control.
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A targeted approach was used for quantification of FFA content while a global metabolite profile
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was performed on fecal, urine and serum samples. PCA was carried out on 100, 141 and 198
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entries in serum, urine and feces, respectively, from samples collected before and after three
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weeks of intervention. A stable baseline was obtained showing no separation i.e. no difference
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between the two groups in any of the three matrices (data not shown). After intervention a clear
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separation along PCA1 of the control and the milk diet was obtained in all three matrices
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explaining 19% of the variation for serum, 17% for urine and 34% for feces samples,
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respectively (Figure 1A, 1B and 1C). As PCA is an unsupervised method only directed by the
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variation of the two datasets, this result confirms a different metabolite profile when milk was
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included in the diet compared to the control diet.
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OPLS-DA models were used to identify metabolites that separated the groups receiving the
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control and milk diets (Figure S1 in supplementary material) and to identify which of the
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detected metabolites were responsible for the observed effect (data not shown). All identified
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metabolites with changed level (selection criteria: variable importance for the projection (VIP)
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value > 1.0) in urine and feces are summarized in Table 2.
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Serum and feces levels of the amino acids: alanine, valine, leucine, proline, serine, methionine,
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pyroglutamic acid, glutamic acid, phenylalanine and lysine was higher at the end of experimental
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period for pigs fed milk diet. Only alanine and serine was higher in urine from pigs fed the milk
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diet. In feces, also the amino acids sarcosine, glycine, methionine, aspartic acid and tyrosine
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were higher in the milk group compared to the control. As the protein level was higher in the
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milk diet this result was expected. Also the amino acid related metabolites, benzoic acid and 2-
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hydroxyisocaproic acid were higher in feces from pigs fed the milk diet compared to the control.
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In urinary the level of the medium chain FAs oxidation metabolites, 3-hydroxyadipoc acid and
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suberic acid, was increased as a result of milk diet both as compared to before the intervention
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(data not shown) and also compared to the control diet at the end of the intervention (Table 2),
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whereas gluconic acid lactone was lower upon milk diet compared to the control.
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The compounds m-xylene, o-xylene, ethylbenzene, 5-hydroxy-2-pentanone and D-cellobiose
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were lower in feces from pigs fed milk diet compared to the control. We have not been able to
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define specific roles for these metabolic differences.
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Pigs given the milk diet excreted more of long-chain saturated FFAs (C14:0, C15:0, C16:0 and
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C18:0) in feces compared to those on control diet, whereas the short and medium chain FFAs
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(C4:0, C8:0, C10:0 and C12:0) was elevated in the urine (Figure 2).
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No changes in TC, HDL-C, LDL-C, LDL-C:HDL-C, TC:HDL-C, TG concentration and their
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delta values were observed between the two dietary groups (Table 3). However, the TC:HDL-C
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ratio tended to be lower (P