Litcius/Paper detail

Yeasts originating from fermented foods, their potential as probiotics and therapeutic implication for human health and disease

Lohith Kunyeit, Reeta P. Rao, K. A. Anu‐Appaiah

2023Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition31 citationsDOI

Abstract

Yeasts derived from fermented foods have historically been known for their organoleptic properties, enriching nutritional values, and producing bioactive metabolites with therapeutic potential. In this review, we discuss the yeast flora in fermented foods, their functional aspects in fermentation, as well as their probiotic and biotherapeutic properties. These yeasts have numerous physical and biochemical characteristics, such as larger cells as compared to bacteria, a rigid cell wall composed primarily of glucans and mannans, natural resistance to antibiotics, and the secretion of secondary metabolites that are both pleasing to the consumer and beneficial to the host’s health and well-being. The review also focused on therapeutic applications of probiotic yeasts derived from fermented foods on infections associated with Candida species. These potential probiotic yeasts present an additional avenue to treat dysbiosis of the gut microbiota and prevent health complications that arise from opportunistic fungal colonization, especially drug-resistant superbugs, which are highlighted in this review.

Topics & Concepts

ProbioticBiologyFlora (microbiology)YeastFermentationFermentation in food processingDysbiosisHealth benefitsMicrobiologyHuman healthBacteriaGut floraFood scienceMedicineLactic acidTraditional medicineImmunologyBiochemistryGeneticsEnvironmental healthMicrobial Metabolites in Food BiotechnologyProbiotics and Fermented FoodsFood composition and properties