Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Fermented Foods, Health and the Gut Microbiome

Natasha Leeuwendaal, Catherine Stanton, Paul W. O’Toole, Tom Beresford

Nutrients · 2022 · ▲ 424 citations

Abstract

Fermented foods have been a part of human diet for almost 10,000 years, and their level of diversity in the 21st century is substantial. The health benefits of fermented foods have been intensively investigated; identification of bioactive peptides and microbial metabolites in fermented foods that can positively affect human health has consolidated this interest. Each fermented food typically hosts a distinct population of microorganisms. Once ingested, nutrients and microorganisms from fermented foods may survive to interact with the gut microbiome, which can now be resolved at the species and strain level by metagenomics. Transient or long-term colonization of the gut by fermented food strains or impacts of fermented foods on indigenous gut microbes can therefore be determined. This review considers the primary food fermentation pathways and microorganisms involved, the potential health benefits, and the ability of these foodstuffs to impact the gut microbiome once ingested either through compounds produced during the fermentation process or through interactions with microorganisms from the fermented food that are capable of surviving in the gastro-intestinal transit. This review clearly shows that fermented foods can affect the gut microbiome in both the short and long term, and should be considered an important element of the human diet.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.3390/nu14071527
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-12 MST

Cite this

APA
Leeuwendaal, N., Stanton, C., O’Toole, P.W., &amp; Beresford, T. (2022). Fermented Foods, Health and the Gut Microbiome. <em>Nutrients</em>. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14071527
Vancouver
Leeuwendaal N, Stanton C, O’Toole PW, Beresford T. Fermented Foods, Health and the Gut Microbiome. Nutrients. 2022. doi:10.3390/nu14071527.
BibTeX
@article{natasha2022Fermen, title = {Fermented Foods, Health and the Gut Microbiome}, author = {Natasha Leeuwendaal and Catherine Stanton and Paul W. O’Toole and Tom Beresford}, journal = {Nutrients}, year = {2022}, doi = {10.3390/nu14071527}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings