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      The effects of dietary ferric iron and iron deprivation on the bacterial composition of the mouse intestine.

      Current Microbiology
      Animals, Bacteria, Anaerobic, drug effects, growth & development, Body Weight, Colon, microbiology, Enterobacteriaceae, Feces, chemistry, Hemoglobins, analysis, Ileum, Iron, deficiency, Iron, Dietary, metabolism, pharmacology, Jejunum, Lactobacillus, Liver, Male, Mice

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          Abstract

          The influence of dietary ferric iron on the intestinal microbiota of mice was investigated with a view to promoting benign lactic acid bacteria (which have minimal iron requirements) in order to enhance colonization-resistance potential. Three groups of eight mice received a diet differing only in iron content, for a period of 12 weeks. Dietary iron deprivation resulted in overall increased small intestinal bacterial populations, including lactic acid bacteria, but these differences were generally not significant (p > 0.05). With the exception of coliforms, all examined bacterial groups (anaerobes, micro-aerophiles, lactobacilli, and enterococci) were significantly (p < 0.05) elevated in the colons of iron-deprived mice. The relatively low numbers of total anaerobes in the colons of iron-replete and iron-overloaded mice suggested that, as well as promotion of bacteria under iron-deprived condition, provision of ferric iron suppressed bacteria, probably by oxidation of normally reduced environments.

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