4.7 Review

Polysaccharides: bowel health and gut microbiota

Journal

CRITICAL REVIEWS IN FOOD SCIENCE AND NUTRITION
Volume 61, Issue 7, Pages 1212-1224

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10408398.2020.1755949

Keywords

Bowel health; gut microbiota; microbial polysaccharides; non-starch polysaccharides; polysaccharides; resistant starches

Funding

  1. Korea Food Research Institute (KFRI) - Ministry of Science and ICT [E0170602-04]

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Polyasaccharides, including starch, non-starch polysaccharides (NSPs), and resistant starch (RS), have various biological benefits for bowel health by influencing gut microbiota and short chain fatty acids (SCFA). The physiological impacts of NSPs and RS on intestinal health are similar, with effects such as anti-inflammation and immune modulation. Bacterial and host-derived polysaccharides play important roles in immune modulation and overall intestinal health, suggesting further studies on polysaccharides are crucial for bowel health.
Polysaccharides that contain many sugar monomers include starch and non-starch polysaccharides (NSPs) together with resistant starch (RS). Dietary polysaccharides are well known to have a wide range of biological benefits for bowel health. Gut microbiota and their fermentative products, short chain fatty acids (SCFA), which have recently been highlighted as metabolic regulators, are thought to mediate the function of dietary complex carbohydrates and bowel health. We discuss the influence of various polysaccharides on human bowel health and the mechanisms underlying these effects. We also describe their biological effects on intestinal health and the mechanisms underlying their activity; the polysaccharides were divided into three categories: dietary, microbial, and host-derived polysaccharides. Physiological impacts of non-starch polysaccharides (NSPs) and resistant starch (RS), both of which pass through the small intestine nearly intact and can be fermented by gut microbiota in the large intestine, are similar to each other. They exert a wide range of beneficial effects including anti-inflammation, gut epithelial barrier protection, and immune modulation through both microbiota-dependent and -independent mechanisms. Bacterial polysaccharides usually found in the cell wall generally act as immune modulators, and host-derived polysaccharides not only protect host cells from pathogenic microbial neighbors but also affect overall intestinal health via interactions with gut microbes. Considering these observations, further studies on polysaccharides will be important for bowel health.

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