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The Impact of Dietary Fiber on Gut Microbiota in Host Health and Disease

Journal

CELL HOST & MICROBE
Volume 23, Issue 6, Pages 705-715

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2018.05.012

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Novo Nordisk Foundation
  2. Swedish Research Council
  3. Swedish Diabetes Foundation
  4. Swedish Heart Lung Foundation
  5. Goran Gustafsson's Foundation
  6. Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
  7. FP7-sponsored program METACARDIS
  8. Region Vastra Gotaland
  9. Sahlgrenska University Hospital
  10. Transatlantic Networks of Excellence Award from the Leducq Foundation
  11. ERC Consolidator Grant (European Research Council) [615362 - METABASE]
  12. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
  13. JPI (healthy diet for a healthy life)

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Food is a primordial need for our survival and well-being. However, diet is not only essential to maintain human growth, reproduction, and health, but it also modulates and supports the symbiotic microbial communities that colonize the digestive tract-the gut microbiota. Type, quality, and origin of our food shape our gut microbes and affect their composition and function, impacting host-microbe interactions. In this review, we will focus on dietary fibers, which interact directly with gut microbes and lead to the production of key metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids, and discuss how dietary fiber impacts gut microbial ecology, host physiology, and health. Hippocrates' notion Let food be thy medicine and medicine be thy food'' remains highly relevant millennia later, but requires consideration of how diet can be used for modulation of gut microbial ecology to promote health.

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