Colonic Health: Fermentation and Short Chain Fatty Acids
University of Toronto · St. Michael's Hospital
Abstract
Interest has been recently rekindled in short chain fatty acids (SCFAs) with the emergence of prebiotics and probiotics aimed at improving colonic and systemic health. Dietary carbohydrates, specifically resistant starches and dietary fiber, are substrates for fermentation that produce SCFAs, primarily acetate, propionate, and butyrate, as end products. The rate and amount of SCFA production depends on the species and amounts of microflora present in the colon, the substrate source and gut transit time. SCFAs are readily absorbed. Butyrate is the major energy source for colonocytes. Propionate is largely taken up by the liver. Acetate enters the peripheral circulation to be metabolized by peripheral tissues.…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.84
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 128
Authors
5- JMJulia MW WongCorresponding
University of Toronto, St. Michael's Hospital
- RJRussell J. de Souza
St. Michael's Hospital, University of Toronto
- CWCyril W.C. Kendall
St. Michael's Hospital, University of Toronto
- AEAzadeh Emam
St. Michael's Hospital, University of Toronto
- DJDavid J.A. Jenkins
University of Toronto, St. Michael's Hospital
Topics & keywords
- Butyrate
- Propionate
- Medicine
- Fermentation
- Short-chain fatty acid
- Ketone bodies
- Biochemistry
- Internal medicine