City
Epaper

Food-producing fungi may produce novel probiotics: Study

By ANI | Updated: October 26, 2023 20:35 IST

Washington [US], October 26 : The food industry has utilised and chosen a variety of fungal strains due to ...

Open in App

Washington [US], October 26 : The food industry has utilised and chosen a variety of fungal strains due to their ability to ferment, produce flavours, or produce heterologous compounds.

Two fungi that are used to make food products may have probiotic benefits on inflammation in the stomach, as per a recent study.

The study illustrated a potentially novel approach to creating novel probiotics and was published in the American Society for Microbiology journal mSystems.

"There is much to learn by studying the role of the fungal strains in the microbiota and host health and also that species simply used in food processes can be the source of new probiotics," said lead study author Mathias L. Richard, PhD, Research Director at INRAE in the Micalis Institute in Jouy-en-Josas, France.

To date, very little is known about the diversity of foodborne yeasts and their potential effect on gut microbiota and gut health. Yeasts are microscopic fungi consisting of solitary cells that reproduce by budding. Some have been used for hundreds of years, like Saccharomyces cerevisiae for wine and bread production, and many others for cheese crust production or ripening, like Debaryomyces hansenii.

The researchers conducted the new study because they are working to further knowledge of the potential effect of the fungal microbiota on human health. In this particular study, the idea was to target specifically the fungi that are used by food companies to produce food products (cheeses, charcuterie). "Since our interest is more focused on the role of fungi in gut health and on the development of Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis), we monitored the effect of these fungi on adapted in vitro and in vivo models," Richard said.

The researchers first selected yeasts that were intensively used in food production and represented a wide range of different yeast species and then tested them either in simple interaction tests with cultured human cells or in a specific animal model mimicking ulcerative colitis.

They found that in the collection of strains used for food production, some strains can have a beneficial effect on the gut and the host in an inflammatory context. They identified 2 strains of yeasts, Cyberlindnera jadinii and Kluyveromyces lactis, that had potentially beneficial effects on inflammatory settings in a mouse model of ulcerative colitis.

Several additional experiments were performed in an attempt to decipher the mechanism behind these effects. In the case of C. jadinii, the protection seemed to be driven by the modification of the bacterial microbiota after the administration of C. jadinii to the mice, which in turn modified the sensitivity to gut inflammation through a still unknown mechanism.

"These 2 strains have never been specifically described with such beneficial effect, so even if it needs to be studied further, and particularly to see how they are efficient in humans, it is a promising discovery," Richard said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalHM Amit Shah in Patna to attend swearing-in of Nitish Kumar

NationalRajasthan DGP directs officers to work with strictness to curb crime

InternationalIsraeli military uncovers Hezbollah attempts to restore Lebanon infrastructure in 'blatant' violation of ceasefire

Other SportsIndian Open squash: Velavan Senthilkumar beats sixth seed Bernat Jaume; Ramit Tandon also advances

InternationalAmbassador Kwatra meets US Congressman Riley Moore; discusses trade, security, energy cooperation

Health Realted Stories

HealthDengue claims six more lives in Bangladesh, 2025 death toll rises to 349

HealthIndia launches 1st indigenous CRISPR-based gene therapy for Sickle Cell Disease

HealthFeeling Extra Cold in Winter? These Vitamin Deficiencies Might Be the Reason

HealthGovt standardises 3 traditional therapies to boost livestock health

HealthChildhood Hypertension on the Rise: Why High Blood Pressure Is Increasing in Kids