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Functional Microbes and Their Incorporation into Foods and Food Supplements: Probiotics and Postbiotics

Melisa Puntillo, Franco Segli, Claude P. Champagne, Yves Raymond, Gabriel Vinderola

2022Annual Review of Food Science and Technology21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Life expectancy has dramatically increased over the past 200 years, but modern life factors such as environmental exposure, antibiotic overuse, C-section deliveries, limited breast-feeding, and diets poor in fibers and microbes could be associated with the rise of noncommunicable diseases such as overweight, obesity, diabetes, food allergies, and colorectal cancer as well as other conditions such as mental disorders. Microbial interventions that range from transplanting a whole undefined microbial community from a healthy gut to an ill one, e.g., so-called fecal microbiota transplantation or vaginal seeding, to the administration of selected well-characterized microbes, either live (probiotics) or not (postbiotics), with efficacy demonstrated in clinical trials, may be effective tools to treat or prevent acute and chronic diseases that humans still face, enhancing the quality of life.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineProbioticObesityOverweightIntensive care medicineEnvironmental healthInternal medicineBiologyGeneticsBacteriaGut microbiota and healthProbiotics and Fermented FoodsMicrobial Metabolites in Food Biotechnology
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