4.6 Review

Dietary fiber in plant cell walls-the healthy carbohydrates

Journal

FOOD QUALITY AND SAFETY
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/fqsafe/fyab037

Keywords

Dietary fiber; carbohydrate; plant cell walls; polysaccharide; glycosyltransferases; healthy food

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31971619, 31901327]
  2. Overseas Expertise Introduction Project for Discipline Innovation (111 Project) [D18008]
  3. research foundation of Zhejiang A&F University, China [2018FR022]

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Dietary fiber is an important nutrient in human diet, with its content and composition varying significantly in different plant species and affected by processing methods. Understanding the composition and biosynthesis of dietary fiber in food plants is crucial for establishing daily intake reference and molecular breeding programs.
Dietary fiber (DF) is one of the major classes of nutrients for humans. It is widely distributed in the edible parts of natural plants, with the cell wall being the main DF-containing structure. DF content varies significantly in different plant species and organs, and the processing procedure can have a dramatic effect on the DF composition of plant-based foods. Given the considerable nutritional value of DF, a deeper understanding of DF in food plants, including its composition and biosynthesis, is fundamental to the establishment of a daily intake reference of DF and is also critical to molecular breeding programs for modifying DF content. In the past decades, plant cell wall biology has seen dramatic progress, and such knowledge is of great potential to be translated into DF-related food science research and may provide future research directions for improving the health benefits of food crops. In this review, to spark interdisciplinary discussions between food science researchers and plant cell wall biologists, we focus on a specific category of DF-cell wall carbohydrates. We first summarize the content and composition of carbohydrate DF in various plant-based foods, and then discuss the structure and biosynthesis mechanism of each carbohydrate DF category, in particular the respective biosynthetic enzymes. Health impacts of DF are highlighted, and finally, future directions of DF research are also briefly outlined.

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