Exploring dietary methods to alter microbial communities and metabolic functions is becoming an increasingly fascinating strategy for improving health. Copra meal hydrolysate (CMH) is alternatively used as a gut health supplement. However, the functional diversity and metabolic activities in gut microbiome in relation to CMH treatment remain largely unknown. Therefore, this study aimed to identify key predominant groups of bacterial species toward diversified metabolic functions, activities, and routes using metaproteomics. As a result, the integrative analysis of metaproteomic data revealed that seven key families across 11 dominant gut bacterial species were concerted. Consistently, across 76,206 proteins assigned to the metabolism of the 255,964 annotated proteins, short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) biosynthesis, lipopolysaccharide (LPS) biosynthesis, and bile acid (BA) metabolism were positively associated with CMH. Further identification of cooperative metabolic routes promisingly highlighted the importance of glycolysis/gluconeogenesis, tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, inositol phosphate metabolism, steroid hormone biosynthesis, O-antigen repeat unit biosynthesis, and chloroalkane and chloroalkene degradation. This work presents an initial study of metaproteomics associated with prebiotic diet in a Thai population-based cohort in a developing Southeast Asian country.
IMPORTANCE
Studies primarily focused on the impact of CMH on gastrointestinal symptoms and gut microbial compositions. However, as the field moves toward understanding the relationship between microbiome and diet in relation to gut health, it is critical to evaluate how changes in metabolic activities relate to cooperative metabolic routes in the gut microbiome for promoting human health. Through the use of metaproteomics, our findings highlighted the key predominant groups of bacterial species, potential proteins, and their metabolic routes involved in gut metabolism. This study provides comprehensive insights into the fundamental relationship between microbiome and dietary supplements and suggests that metaproteomics is a powerful method for monitoring metabolic functions, activities, and routes in the gut microbiome.