Unbound MEDLINE

Eukaryotic-Microbiota Crosstalk: Potential Mechanisms for Health Benefits of Prebiotics and Probiotics. Annual review of nutrition [Annu Rev Nutr] Journal article

 
TitleEukaryotic-Microbiota Crosstalk: Potential Mechanisms for Health Benefits of Prebiotics and Probiotics.
Author(s)Hord NG 
InstitutionDepartment of Food Science and Human Nutrition, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824; email: hord@msu.edu.
SourceAnnu Rev Nutr 2008 May 19.
AbstractThe ability to link dietary consumption of prebiotic food ingredients and probiotic microorganisms to health benefits rests, in part, on our ability to identify both the extent to which these factors alter human microbiome activity and/or structure and the ability to engage eukaryotic cells necessary to transduce signals originating from the microbiome. The human microbiome consists of bacterial, archaeal, and fungal components that reside in mucosal surfaces of the gut, the airways, and the urogenital tract. Characterization of the symbiotic nature of the relationship between eukaryotic cells and the bacterial and archaeal components of the microbiota has revealed significant contributions in energy balance, bowel function, immunologic function, sensory perception, glycemic control, and blood pressure regulation. Elucidating the complex interactions between the microbiota and their associated epithelial, immune, and neural cells may provide mechanistic insights and a rational basis for our belief that dietary consumption of probiotic microorganisms and prebiotics produce health benefits. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Nutrition Volume 28 is July 17, 2008. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/catalog/pubdates.aspx for revised estimates.
LanguageENG
Pub Type(s)JOURNAL ARTICLE
PubMed ID18489258
  
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