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Targeting gut microbial bile salt hydrolase (BSH) by diet supplements: new insights into dietary modulation of human health

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FOOD & FUNCTION
卷 13, 期 14, 页码 7409-7422

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ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2fo01252a

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The gut microbiome plays a crucial role in human health by participating in nutrient acquisition, energy regulation, and maintenance of overall health. Manipulating the gut microbiota through dietary supplements has proven to be effective in improving human health. Bile acids are extensively metabolized by the gut microbes and control various metabolic processes, such as energy homeostasis and glucose and lipid metabolism, through activation of the farnesoid X receptor (FXR). This review focuses on the effects of dietary supplements on FXR signaling and how they promote human health by affecting the gut microbiota and bile acids-FXR signaling axis.
The gut microbiome is increasingly recognized as a vital organ that participates in nutrient acquisition, energy regulation and maintenance of human health. Targeted manipulation of the gut microbiota by dietary supplements has been validated as an effective approach to improve human health. Among various gut microbiome-host interactions, bile acids (BAs) are intensively metabolized by the gut microbes and control a variety of metabolic processes such as energy homeostasis, glucose and lipid metabolism by activation of farnesoid X receptor (FXR). How dietary supplements regulate FXR signaling and promote human health is thus attracting broad interest and well-reviewed. However, the exact effects of BAs on FXR activity and host metabolism are compound-specific. Different BAs are metabolized by the gut microbes into varied BA derivatives and then impose distinct modulation of FXR activity and host health. As the gateway enzymes, bile salt hydrolases (BSHs), produced by the gut microbiota, control the first step of BA transformation in the gut. Therefore, BSH is a key mediator linking the food supplements' modulation to the gut microbiota and BAs-FXR signaling. In this review, we generalized the relationship between BAs, gut microbial BSHs and FXR, and summarized the dietary regulators of BSH and FXR activities, aiming to rationalize the dietary management of human health via dietary supplement-gut microbiota-FXR signaling axis.

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