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Short chain fatty acids in human gut and metabolic health

Ellen E. Blaak, Emanuel E. Canfora, Stephan Theis, Gary Frost, Albert K. Groen, Gilles Mithieux, Arjen Nauta, Karen P. Scott, Bernd Stahl, Jessica Van Harsselaar, Rob Van Tol, Elaine E. Vaughan, Kristin Verbeke

Beneficial Microbes · 2020 · ▲ 1,074 citations

Abstract

Evidence is accumulating that short chain fatty acids (SCFA) play an important role in the maintenance of gut and metabolic health. The SCFA acetate, propionate and butyrate are produced from the microbial fermentation of indigestible carbohydrates and appear to be key mediators of the beneficial effects elicited by the gut microbiome. Microbial SCFA production is essential for gut integrity by regulating the luminal pH, mucus production, providing fuel for epithelial cells and effects on mucosal immune function. SCFA also directly modulate host metabolic health through a range of tissue-specific mechanisms related to appetite regulation, energy expenditure, glucose homeostasis and immunomodulation. Therefore, an increased microbial SCFA production can be considered as a health benefit, but data are mainly based on animal studies, whereas well-controlled human studies are limited. In this review an expert group by ILSI Europe's Prebiotics Task Force discussed the current scientific knowledge on SCFA to consider the relationship between SCFA and gut and metabolic health with a particular focus on human evidence. Overall, the available mechanistic data and limited human data on the metabolic consequences of elevated gut-derived SCFA production strongly suggest that increasing SCFA production could be a valuable strategy in the preventing gastro-intestinal dysfunction, obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus. Nevertheless, there is an urgent need for well controlled longer term human SCFA intervention studies, including measurement of SCFA fluxes and kinetics, the heterogeneity in response based on metabolic phenotype, the type of dietary fibre and fermentation site in fibre intervention studies and the control for factors that could shape the microbiome like diet, physical activity and use of medication.

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.3920/bm2020.0057
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2026-06-13 MST

Cite this

APA
Blaak, E.E., Canfora, E.E., Theis, S., Frost, G., Groen, A.K., Mithieux, G., Nauta, A., Scott, K.P., Stahl, B., Harsselaar, J.V., Tol, R.V., Vaughan, E.E., &amp; Verbeke, K. (2020). Short chain fatty acids in human gut and metabolic health. <em>Beneficial Microbes</em>. https://doi.org/10.3920/bm2020.0057
Vancouver
Blaak EE, Canfora EE, Theis S, Frost G, Groen AK, Mithieux G, et al. Short chain fatty acids in human gut and metabolic health. Beneficial Microbes. 2020. doi:10.3920/bm2020.0057.
BibTeX
@article{ellen2020Shortc, title = {Short chain fatty acids in human gut and metabolic health}, author = {Ellen E. Blaak and Emanuel E. Canfora and Stephan Theis and Gary Frost and Albert K. Groen and Gilles Mithieux and Arjen Nauta and Karen P. Scott and Bernd Stahl and Jessica Van Harsselaar and Rob Van Tol and Elaine E. Vaughan and Kristin Verbeke}, journal = {Beneficial Microbes}, year = {2020}, doi = {10.3920/bm2020.0057}, }

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