Journal of Functional Foods (Jun 2022)

Long-term daily high-protein, drained yoghurt consumption alters abundance of selected functional groups of the human gut microbiota and fecal short-chain fatty acid profiles in a cohort of overweight and obese women

  • Fariba Ghiamati Yazdi,
  • Line Barner Dalgaard,
  • Qing Li,
  • Hans-Joachim Ruscheweyh,
  • Rebekka Thøgersen,
  • Hanne Christine Bertram,
  • Mette Hansen,
  • Clarissa Schwab

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 93
p. 105089

Abstract

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The consumption of fermented foods has gained considerable attention due to the ability to deliver live microbes with specific enzymatic activities, and fermentation metabolites, which might play a role in health promotion or disease prevention. The aim of this study was to determine the impact of long-term daily consumption of a high-protein drained yoghurt (Skyr) on intestinal microbial ecology and fermentation activity in a free-living cohort of overweight and obese women (n = 29). Longitudinal analysis and quantitative microbiota profiling identified time intervals with significantly differentially abundant taxa during intervention that differed in functional activity. Our results suggest that ingestion of Skyr persistently modified intestinal microbial cross-feeding activities which altered fecal short chain fatty acid profiles. This study provides a framework indicating the potential of fermented dairy containing starter cultures, lactose and lactate in individualized nutrition or microbiome engineering due to nutritive and microbial components.

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