Assessment of the Probiotic Potential of a Dairy Product Fermented by [i]Propionibacterium freudenreichii[/i] in Piglets
Résumé
Dairy propionibacteria, including Propionibacterium freudenreichii, display promising probiotic properties, including immunomodulation. These properties are highly strain-dependent and rarely studied in a fermented dairy product. We screened 10 strains, grown in a newly developed fermented milk ultrafiltrate, for immunomodulatory properties in vitro. The most anti-inflammatory strain, P. freudenreichii BIA129, was further tested on piglets. P. freudenreichii-fermented productimproved food intake and growth of piglets. Colonic mucosa explants of treated pigs secreted less interleukin 8 (−25%, P < 0.05) and tumor necrosis factor α (−20%, P < 0.05), either in basal conditions or after a lipopolysaccharide challenge. By contrast, the gut structure, barrier function (measured ex vivo in Ussing chambers), microbial diversity (assessed by 16S rRNA pyrosequencing), and colonic short-chain fatty acid content were unchanged, assuming maintenance of normal intestinal physiology. In conclusion, this work confirms in vivo probiotic properties of dairy propionibacteria-fermented products, which are promising for the prevention or healing of inflammatory bowel diseases.