Microbial degradation of complex carbohydrates in the gut
University of Aberdeen · Aberdeenshire Council · +1 more institution
Abstract
Bacteria that colonize the mammalian intestine collectively possess a far larger repertoire of degradative enzymes and metabolic capabilities than their hosts. Microbial fermentation of complex non-digestible dietary carbohydrates and host-derived glycans in the human intestine has important consequences for health. Certain dominant species, notably among the Bacteroidetes, are known to possess very large numbers of genes that encode carbohydrate active enzymes and can switch readily between different energy sources in the gut depending on availability. Nevertheless, more nutritionally specialized bacteria appear to play critical roles in the community by initiating the degradation of complex substrates such…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 34.99
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 190
Authors
5- HJHarry J. FlintCorresponding
University of Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire Council
- KPKaren P. Scott
University of Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire Council
- SHSylvia H. Duncan
University of Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire Council
- PLPetra Louis
University of Aberdeen, Aberdeenshire Council
- ÉFÉvelyne Forano
Unité Mixte de Recherche sur les Herbivores
Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Degradation (telecommunications)
- Biotechnology
- Food science
- Computational biology
- Microbiology
- Zero hunger