Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry (May 2017)

Resistant Starch Regulates Gut Microbiota: Structure, Biochemistry and Cell Signalling

  • Xiaoping Yang,
  • Kwame Oteng Darko,
  • Yanjun Huang,
  • Caimei He,
  • Huansheng Yang,
  • Shanping He,
  • Jianzhong Li,
  • Jian Li,
  • Berthold Hocher,
  • Yulong Yin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1159/000477386
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 1
pp. 306 – 318

Abstract

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Starch is one of the most popular nutritional sources for both human and animals. Due to the variation of its nutritional traits and biochemical specificities, starch has been classified into rapidly digestible, slowly digestible and resistant starch. Resistant starch has its own unique chemical structure, and various forms of resistant starch are commercially available. It has been found being a multiple-functional regulator for treating metabolic dysfunction. Different functions of resistant starch such as modulation of the gut microbiota, gut peptides, circulating growth factors, circulating inflammatory mediators have been characterized by animal studies and clinical trials. In this mini-review, recent remarkable progress in resistant starch on gut microbiota, particularly the effect of structure, biochemistry and cell signaling on nutrition has been summarized, with highlights on its regulatory effect on gut microbiota.

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