Code
365O9112
Duration
01 November 2012 → 01 December 2015
Funding
Funding by bilateral agreement (private and foundations)
Promotor
Research disciplines
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Natural sciences
- Animal biology
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Agricultural and food sciences
- Veterinary medicine
- Other veterinary sciences
- Other agricultural and food sciences
Keywords
gastrointestinal microbiota
Project description
The hypothesis of this project is that obese dogs have a particulaar set of microbiota that differs from their lean counterparts, which allows energy to be more efficiently harvested from the diet and causes increased inflammatory tone resulting from a compromised epithelial integrity. The objectives are to determine the predominant GI microbial species in obese dogs and compare it with lean dogs and whether different macronutrients in a diet leads to weight gain by influencing the composition of the microbiota