4.7 Review

Resistant starch, microbiome, and precision modulation

Journal

GUT MICROBES
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/19490976.2021.1926842

Keywords

Resistant starch; microbiome; personalized therapies; personalized medicine; precision medicine; clinical trials

Funding

  1. Government of Canada through Genome Canada
  2. Ontario Genomics Institute [OGI-149]
  3. Ontario Ministry of Economic Development and Innovation [13440]
  4. W. Garfield Weston Foundation

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Resistant starches have the potential to modulate health by affecting the gut microbiome, but there is significant inter-individual variation in their effects, suggesting that the choice of resistant starch and the individual's baseline microbiome are crucial factors.
Resistant starch, microbiome, and precision modulation. Mounting evidence has positioned the gut microbiome as a nexus of health. Modulating its phylogenetic composition and function has become an attractive therapeutic prospect. Resistant starches (granular amylase-resistant alpha-glycans) are available as physicochemically and morphologically distinguishable products. Attempts to leverage resistant starch as microbiome-modifying interventions in clinical studies have yielded remarkable inter-individual variation. Consequently, their utility as a potential therapy likely depends predominantly on the selected resistant starch and the subject's baseline microbiome. The purpose of this review is to detail i) the heterogeneity of resistant starches, ii) how resistant starch is sequentially degraded and fermented by specialized gut microbes, and iii) how resistant starch interventions yield variable effects on the gut microbiome.

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