Diet-gut microbiome interaction and ferulic acid bioavailability: implications on neurodegenerative disorders.
Saarika Pothuvan KunnummalMahejibin KhanPublished in: European journal of nutrition (2023)
The human gut is a niche for a highly dense microbial population. Nutrient components and the quality of food shape the gut microbiota. Microbiota-diet-host interaction primarily involves an array of enzymes that hydrolyse complex polysaccharides and release covalently attached moieties, thereby increasing their bio-accessibility. Moreover, genes encoding polysaccharide degrading enzymes are substrate inducible, giving selective microorganisms a competitive advantage in scavenging nutrients. Nutraceutical therapy using specific food components holds promise as a prophylactic agent and as an adjunctive treatment strategy in neurotherapeutics, as it results in upregulation of polysaccharide utilisation loci containing fae genes in the gut microbiota, thereby increasing the release of FA and other antioxidant molecules and combat neurodegenerative processes.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- weight loss
- physical activity
- endothelial cells
- bioinformatics analysis
- dna methylation
- genome wide identification
- human health
- water soluble
- oxidative stress
- microbial community
- poor prognosis
- heavy metals
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- big data
- stem cells
- risk assessment
- pluripotent stem cells
- mass spectrometry
- replacement therapy
- combination therapy
- high density
- genome wide association study
- single cell