reviewJournal of Clinical MedicineMay 23, 2025GOLD OA

A Review of the Influence of Prebiotics, Probiotics, Synbiotics, and Postbiotics on the Human Gut Microbiome and Intestinal Integrity

Wroclaw Medical University · Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Objective

This review aims to comprehensively evaluate the current evidence on the role of prebiotics, probiotics, synbiotics, and postbiotics-collectively referred to as "biotics"-in modulating the human gut microbiota and enhancing intestinal epithelial integrity.

Findings

Biotics exert their beneficial effects through several mechanisms, including by promoting the growth of beneficial microbes, producing short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), strengthening the gut barrier, and regulating immune responses. Prebiotics selectively stimulate beneficial bacteria, probiotics introduce live microorganisms with therapeutic functions, synbiotics combine the strengths of both, and postbiotics offer non-viable microbial components and metabolites that mimic probiotic benefits with enhanced safety profiles. Each type of biotic demonstrates unique and complementary effects across a range of conditions, such as inflammatory bowel disease, irritable bowel syndrome, obesity, constipation, and antibiotic-associated diarrhea.

Citation impact

77
total citations
FWCI
47.71
Percentile
100%
References
238
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Synbiotics
  • Medicine
  • Gut microbiome
  • Microbiome
  • Intestinal Microbiome
  • Prebiotic
  • Gut flora
  • Probiotic
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