Authors
Kristin A Verbeke, Alan R Boobis, Alessandro Chiodini, Christine A Edwards, Anne Franck, Michiel Kleerebezem, Arjen Nauta, Jeroen Raes, Eric AF Van Tol, Kieran M Tuohy
Publication date
2015/6
Source
Nutrition research reviews
Volume
28
Issue
1
Pages
42-66
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Description
Available evidence on the bioactive, nutritional and putative detrimental properties of gut microbial metabolites has been evaluated to support a more integrated view of how prebiotics might affect host health throughout life. The present literature inventory targeted evidence for the physiological and nutritional effects of metabolites, for example, SCFA, the potential toxicity of other metabolites and attempted to determine normal concentration ranges. Furthermore, the biological relevance of more holistic approaches like faecal water toxicity assays and metabolomics and the limitations of faecal measurements were addressed. Existing literature indicates that protein fermentation metabolites (phenol, p-cresol, indole, ammonia), typically considered as potentially harmful, occur at concentration ranges in the colon such that no toxic effects are expected either locally or following systemic absorption. The endproducts of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
KA Verbeke, AR Boobis, A Chiodini, CA Edwards… - Nutrition research reviews, 2015