Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T09:29:40.677Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Microbiota and probiotics: chances and challenges – a symposium report

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2023

Carrie Helen Stevenson Ruxton*
Affiliation:
Nutrition Communications, Cupar, UK
Chiyuki Kajita
Affiliation:
Yakult Europe BV, Almere, Netherlands
Paola Rocca
Affiliation:
Yakult Italia Srl, Milan, Italy
Bruno Pot
Affiliation:
Yakult Europe BV, Almere, Netherlands
*
Corresponding author: Carrie Helen Stevenson Ruxton; Email: carrie@nutrition-communications.com

Abstract

The 10th International Yakult Symposium was held in Milan, Italy, on 13–14 October 2022. Two keynote lectures covered the crewed journey to space and its implications for the human microbiome, and how current regulatory systems can be adapted and updated to ensure the safety of microorganisms used as probiotics or food processing ingredients. The remaining lectures were split into sections entitled “Chances” and “Challenges.” The “Chances” section explored opportunities for the science of probiotics and fermented foods to contribute to diverse areas of health such as irritable bowel syndrome, major depression, Parkinson’s disease, immune dysfunction, infant colic, intensive care, respiratory infections, and promoting healthy longevity. The “Challenges” section included selecting appropriate clinical trial participants and methodologies to minimise heterogeneity in responses, how to view probiotics in the context of One Health, adapting regulatory frameworks, and understanding how substances of bacterial origin can cross the blood–brain barrier. The symposium provided evidence from cutting-edge research that gut eubiosis is vital for human health and, like space, the microbiota deserves further exploration of its vast potential.

Type
Review
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Nutrition Society

Introduction

Decades of research have revealed the remarkable extent to which the gut microbiota (GM) influences and interacts with many areas of the body beyond the large intestine. Slowly, a picture has emerged of the potential role of the GM in helping to modulate gut health, immune function, mineral absorption, metabolic balance, appetite, brain health, and ageing.

This creates opportunities for the use of dietary or medical interventions which may impact the GM by promoting particular microbiological species, excluding others, or broadening microbiological diversity. It also poses challenges to understanding mechanisms, ideal intakes, appropriate health markers, and characteristics of responders, as well as how best to regulate products.

These were the topics considered by the 10th International Yakult Symposium held in Milan, Italy, on 13–14 October 2022. This report summarises the presentations given by a panel of international experts and invites reflection on the chances and challenges presented by the study of the GM and probiotics.

The crewed journey to space and its implications for the human microbiome

Space travel is a unique environment in which to study the human microbiome. Prof. Christine Moissl-Eichinger from the Medical University of Graz, Austria, outlined why a good understanding of the GM is essential for ensuring the success of crewed space missions, mainly as 8 per cent of astronauts report gastrointestinal issues and access to medical interventions in space is limited.

Simulation experiments

Space training in closed systems provides opportunities to study changes in the GM and those microorganisms present in the environment (Kuehnast et al., Reference Kuehnast, Abbott, Pausan, Pearce, Moissl-Eichinger and Mahnert2022). One example is the Mars 500 experiment which saw six crew members spend 520 days in a terrestrial-based simulator to mimic a journey to Mars (Schwendner et al., Reference Schwendner, Mahnert, Koskinen, Moissl-Eichinger, Barczyk, Wirth, Berg and Rettberg2017). During this time, samples at different time points were taken from the surfaces and air of the module, revealing that microbial communities followed the functions of humans and could also be altered by human activity (eg. changing to a different cleaning product). This experiment also tracked the GM of the six crew members. Remarkably, given the constrained environment and similar diet, each person had their own signature GM which fluctuated over time but remained distinct from the GM of other crew members. Individual phyla, such as Pseudomonadota (formerly the Proteobacteria), Bacteroidota (formerly the Bacteriodetes), or Verrucomicrobiota (formerly Verrucomicrobia; Oren and Garrity, Reference Oren and Garrity2021) found in one person’s GM could be completely missing in the GM of others. In three subjects, major fluctuations in microbial configurations occurred after 340 days (range 330–360 days) in the module, which could be related to stress, or the tasks being performed. These fluctuations were characterised by the depletion of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, Ruminococcus bromii, Blautia luti, Anaerostipes hadrus, and Roseburia faecis.

Another Mars simulation model is the Hawai’i Space Exploration Analog and Simulation (HI-SEAS) mission (Mahnert et al., Reference Mahnert, Verseux, Schwendner, Koskinen, Kumpitsch, Blohs, Wink, Brunner, Goessler, Billi and Moissl-Eichinger2021). This involved a team of astronauts spending 4–12 months in a 111 m2 module, during which time samples were taken from different areas of the module and the crew’s skin and faeces. Some interesting patterns emerged. Firstly, the microbial diversity reflected the function of the living area (eg. the toilet and kitchen). There was a crossover in the human microbiota when interactions occurred, such as a higher number of pathogens on the skin of the crew on toilet cleaning duty. Secondly, while each person had their microbiota signature, there were evident crossovers of species between those astronauts who had the most interactions with other crew members. Thirdly, while the microbiome of the built environment remained relatively stable over time, the skin microbiome of the crew increased in diversity as it incorporated species from the environment. This was particularly the case during an episode where a technical failure of the toilet facilities forced individual crew members to carry out additional cleaning duties, providing more chances for them to come into contact with faecal bacteria, which was then reflected in their skin microbiome.

Experiments in space

Few studies have been conducted in space. In one of these, Mora et al. (Reference Mora, Wink, Kögler, Mahnert, Rettberg, Schwendner, Demets, Cockell, Alekhova, Klingl, Krause, Zolotariof, Alexandrova and Moissl-Eichinger2019) tested whether the unique conditions inside the International Space Station (ISS) altered the microorganisms found there. This is warranted since there is evidence that microgravity can influence the virulence of certain species (Rosenzweig et al., Reference Rosenzweig, Abogunde, Thomas, Lawal, Nguyen, Sodipe and Jejelowo2010), while technophilic microorganisms have been known to cause equipment to malfunction in space. The EXTREMOPHILES study involved sampling in several areas of the ISS over 3 months. The key learnings were:

Further studies have found that space travel disrupts the normal GM, probably due to the influence of stress. During one space mission, astronauts’ skin, nose, and gut microbiomes changed markedly. The GM became more similar across crew members, primarily due to a drop in the abundance of several bacterial taxa mainly Akkermansia, Ruminococcus, Pseudobutyrivibrio and Fusicatenibacter (Voorhies et al., Reference Voorhies, Mark Ott, Mehta, Pierson, Crucian, Feiveson, Oubre, Torralba, Moncera, Zhang, Zurek and Lorenzi2019). However, one longer-term study in twins (Garrett-Bakelman et al., Reference Garrett-Bakelman, Darshi, Green, Gur, Lin, Macias, McKenna, Meydan, Mishra, Nasrini, Piening, Rizzardi, Sharma, Siamwala, Taylor, Vitaterna, Afkarian, Afshinnekoo, Ahadi, Ambati, Arya, Bezdan, Callahan, Chen, Choi, Chlipala, Contrepois, Covington, Crucian, De Vivo, Dinges, Ebert, Feinberg, Gandara, George, Goutsias, Grills, Hargens, Heer, Hillary, Hoofnagle, VYH, Jenkinson, Jiang, Keshavarzian, Laurie, Lee-McMullen, Lumpkins, MacKay, Maienschein-Cline, Melnick, Moore, Nakahira, Patel, Pietrzyk, Rao, Saito, Salins, Schilling, Sears, Sheridan, Stenger, Tryggvadottir, Urban, Vaisar, Van Espen, Zhang, Ziegler, Zwart, Charles, Kundrot, Scott, Bailey, Basner, Feinberg, Lee, Mason, Mignot, Rana, Smith, Snyder and Turek2019) found that the GM shifts back to the pre-flight pattern within 6 months of the astronaut returning to Earth.

To summarise, the microbiome of the built environment in space fluctuates around a set of core species but does not appear to present a particular risk to crew health in terms of pathogenicity, virulence, or antibiotic resistance. This is relevant as there are limited opportunities to treat microbial infections in space. While space travel disrupts humans’ normal skin and gut microbiome, this effect is reversible. Future space experiments will help find the answers to essential questions such as how to control microbial outbreaks in space, how to treat microbial disease in space, whether there is a need for novel probiotics/prebiotics, and how the microbiome of space environments and crew can be monitored long term at vast distances from Earth.

Parkinson’s disease: evidence for the role of the gut

Initially viewed as a brain condition, there is growing evidence that the gut has a role in initiating Parkinson’s disease (PD), as discussed by Prof. Aletta Kraneveld from Utrecht University, The Netherlands.

PD affects 1 per cent of older adults and is an incurable condition characterised by progressive tremors, muscle rigidity, postural instability, and intestinal dysfunction. This conflation of gut and brain symptoms implies two origins for the accumulation of α-synuclein (Lewy bodies) in the brain leading to neuro-inflammation and neurodegeneration (Horsager et al., Reference Horsager, Andersen, Knudsen, Skjærbæk, Fedorova, Okkels, Schaeffer, Bonkat, Geday, Otto, Sommerauer, Danielsen, Bech, Kraft, Munk, Hansen, Pavese, Göder, Brooks, Berg and Borghammer2020): either a direct central nervous system phenotype, or an indirect intestinal phenotype where leaky gut and endotoxemia lead to mucosal inflammation, microbiome changes and, eventually, α-synuclein accumulation (Rietdijk et al., Reference Rietdijk, Perez-Pardo, Garssen, van Wezel and Kraneveld2017; Scheperjans et al., Reference Scheperjans, Derkinderen and Borghammer2018).

Intestinal phenotype hypothesis

This is supported by more than 15 cohort studies which found correlations between neurological deterioration and gut dysbiosis characterised by reduced Prevotella, lower levels of faecal short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), increased lipopolysaccharide- (LPS) producing bacteria, and increased pro-inflammatory Lactobacillaceae (Li et al., Reference Li, Liang, Hu, Lu, Zheng, Fan, Wu, Zou, Luo, Zhang, Zeng, Liu, Zhou, Yue, Ren, Li, Su and Xu2023). Murine models have built on this concept. Mice which genetically overexpress α-synuclein develop PD-related pathophysiology and motor dysfunction, but such changes do not occur if α-synuclein overexpression mice are bred germ-free. However, inoculating these germ-free mice with GM from PD patients induces the pathology to a greater extent than non-exposed α-synuclein overexpression mice, proving that gut bacteria are essential to initiating the disease (Sampson et al., Reference Sampson, Debelius, Thron, Janssen, Shastri, Ilhan, Challis, Schretter, Rocha, Gradinaru, Chesselet, Keshavarzian, Shannon, Krajmalnik-Brown, Wittung-Stafshede, Knight and Mazmanian2016).

Other studies corroborate gut-related mechanisms. Colonising α-synuclein overexpression mice with E. coli, which produce curli fibres (pro-inflammatory proteins which mediate host cell adhesion and invasion), led to the further aggregation of α-synuclein in the gut and brain, and enhanced brain inflammation, gut problems, and motor dysfunction (Chapman et al., Reference Chapman, Robinson, Pinkner, Roth, Heuser, Hammar, Normark and Hultgren2002). Another study (Matheoud et al., Reference Matheoud, Cannon, Voisin, Penttinen, Ramet, Fahmy, Ducrot, Laplante, Bourque, Zhu, Cayrol, Le Campion, McBride, Gruenheid, Trudeau and Desjardins2019) considered the role of the PINK1 gene, which is responsible for clearing mitochondria damaged during the progression of PD. Knocking out PINK1 would be expected to induce or exacerbate PD-like changes in animal models. However, this does not happen unless there is also an intestinal infection with LPS-producing bacteria.

A study of gut biopsies from PD patients revealed evidence of tight junction decline, leaky gut, and endotoxemia, and enhanced toll-like receptor (TLR) 4 expression, suggesting that PD is a TLR disease (Perez-Pardo et al., Reference Perez-Pardo, Dodiya, Engen, Forsyth, Huschens, Shaikh, Voigt, Naqib, Green, Kordower, Shannon, Garssen, Kraneveld and Keshavarzian2019). This hypothesis was tested using the pesticide, rotenone (an isoflavone molecule), which can initiate PD-like pathophysiology in animal models. Compared with wild-type mice which developed the expected pathogenic changes, oral exposure to rotenone for several weeks did not lead to gut dysbiosis or α-synuclein accumulation in TLR4 knock-out mice. In addition, the loss of dopamine-producing cells in the substantia nigra was less pronounced and there were fewer motor and cognitive problems. A similar disruption of the expected PD pathophysiology was seen following the use of TLR4 antagonists and TLR4 blocking antibodies, and when the vagus nerve was cut suggesting that this is the likely route by which α-synuclein spreads, prion-like, to the brain (Kim et al., Reference Kim, Choi, Shin, Jin, Bae, Han, Seo, Chun and Chung2019).

Can GM modulation slow the progression of PD?

Faecal microbiota transplants (FMT) in murine models of PD reduce gut dysbiosis and neuroinflammation and result in fewer motor problems. Human trials are limited but demonstrate encouraging results for motor and non-motor symptoms in PD patients (Segal et al., Reference Segal, Zlotnik, Moyal-Atias, Abuhasira and Ifergane2021). Research on probiotics and synbiotics is more advanced and suggests that these are safe and effective, although further evidence is needed. In vivo studies report improved glucose metabolism, reduced inflammation, and neurodegeneration (Leta et al., Reference Leta, Ray Chaudhuri, Milner, Chung-Faye, Metta, Pariante and Borsini2021). In a review of eight clinical trials in PD patients given lactobacilli or bifidobacteria probiotics (Hong et al., Reference Hong, Chen and Huang2022), constipation was significantly reduced, and modest anti-inflammatory effects were observed. A downside of using probiotics in PD is the potential for probiotic-drug interactions since bacterial decarboxylases may affect the bioavailability of l-dopamine, a Carbidopa component commonly used to manage PD neurological symptoms (van Kessel et al., Reference van Kessel, Frye, El-Gendy, Castejon, Keshavarzian, van Dijk and El Aidy2019).

Murine PD models have been used to test the efficacy of diets containing precursors for neuronal membrane synthesis, such as long-chain omega-3 fatty acids, choline, uridine, vitamins, and minerals (Perez-Pardo et al., Reference Perez-Pardo, Dodiya, Broersen, Douna, van Wijk, Lopes da Silva, Garssen, Keshavarzian and Kraneveld2018b). Overall, the nutritional intervention was effective at partially alleviating the rotenone-induced neurological changes in mice. A further study tested an enhanced experimental diet containing the same nutrients as before plus prebiotic fibres but introduced it 28 days after rotenone exposure when adverse neurological changes had already occurred (Perez-Pardo et al., Reference Perez-Pardo, Broersen, Kliest, van Wijk, Attali, Garssen and Kraneveld2017). Compared with the control diet, the enhanced prebiotic-rich diet was more effective at normalising the mice’s rotenone-induced motor and non-motor abnormalities. These findings suggest that dietary treatments can help reverse neurological changes in mice and that diets that modulate the GM appear to deliver more benefits than those providing nutritional support (Perez-Pardo et al., Reference Perez-Pardo, Broersen, Kliest, van Wijk, Attali, Garssen and Kraneveld2018a).

In summary, there is growing evidence for a gut-first model of PD. However, further robust human studies in target populations are needed to understand the gut–brain mechanisms involved and identify opportunities for early intervention.

Underlying mechanisms of depression and the modulating role of probiotics

Another condition potentially influenced by the gut–brain axis is major depressive disorder (MDD), which affects around 280 million people worldwide and is characterised by symptoms including depressed mood, anxiety, and insomnia. Dr Kazunori Matsuda, from the Yakult Central Institute, Japan, proposed underlying mechanisms related to the GM and the therapeutic potential of probiotics.

Gut–brain axis

Bidirectional communication exists between the GM and the brain. The brain influences the gut via the autonomic nervous system, while the gut, including microbe-derived molecules, influences the brain via humoral and neuronal pathways (summarised in Suda and Matsuda, Reference Suda and Matsuda2022). The idea that the GM could be linked to depression arose from studies where mice receiving an FMT from MDD patients displayed depression-like behaviour compared to control mice given an FMT from healthy people (Zheng et al., Reference Zheng, Zeng, Zhou, Liu, Fang, Xu, Zeng, Chen, Fan, Du, Zhang, Yang, Yang, Meng, Li, Melgiri, Licinio, Wei and Xie2016), which indicates the role of dysbiosis in MDD development.

Further evidence came from a systematic review of 17 studies characterising the GM of MDD patients (Knudsen et al., Reference Knudsen, Bundgaard-Nielsen, Hjerrild, Nielsen, Leutscher and Sørensen2021), which found reduced numbers of Faecalibacterium, a producer of butyrate, a SCFA linked to the maintenance of neurogenesis and anti-inflammatory effects. Other work reported that MDD patients have a lower abundance of bifidobacteria and lactobacilli than healthy controls (Aizawa et al., Reference Aizawa, Tsuji, Asahara, Takahashi, Teraishi, Yoshida, Ota, Koga, Hattori and Kunugi2016). However, this is not a consistent pattern across studies, perhaps due to differences in subjects’ backgrounds.

Mechanisms

What are the likely mechanisms if gut dysbiosis were influential in the pathology of depression? MDD is recognised as a multifactorial condition linked to abnormal stress response, reduced neurogenesis, and neuroinflammation, pathways where the GM may impact. Chronic stress is a risk factor for MDD onset, resulting in the hypothalamus–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis-mediated dysregulation of the stress response. The HPA axis is understood to be a key pathway of stress response through cortisol secretion. Normally, cortisol regulates its secretion via negative feedback through the HPA. However, in MDD patients, the feedback system is impaired, resulting in elevated blood cortisol. Brain exposure to high levels of cortisol induces chronic inflammation and reduced brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) protein – an important regulator of neuronal growth, survival, and plasticity.

Animal studies have found that the stress response is pronounced with a lack of GM when germ-free mice are exposed to physical restraint stress. However, when germ-free mice were inoculated with Bifidobacterium infantis, the exaggerated HPA stress response was reversed (Sudo et al., Reference Sudo, Chida, Aiba, Sonoda, Oyama, Yu, Kubo and Koga2004). One signalling route from the gut to the brain is the vagus nerve, and some probiotic strains such as Lacticaseibacillus paracasei strain Shirota (LcS) have been shown to stimulate the activity of the gastric branch of the vagal afferent to suppress the stress-induced increase in blood corticosterone (Takada et al., Reference Takada, Nishida, Kataoka-Kato, Gondo, Ishikawa, Suda, Kawai, Hoshi, Watanabe, Igarashi, Kuwano, Miyazaki and Rokutan2016).

Reduced neurogenesis, another part of the pathophysiology of MDD, is believed to be caused by neuroinflammation and excessive stress, demonstrated by a smaller volume of certain brain regions in MDD patients (Treadway et al., Reference Treadway, Waskom, Dillon, Holmes, Park, Chakravarty, Dutra, Polli, Iosifescu, Fava, Gabrieli and Pizzagalli2015) and lower BDNF in cerebrospinal fluid (Mizui et al., Reference Mizui, Hattori, Ishiwata, Hidese, Yoshida, Kunugi and Kojima2019). This may have a GM link since germ-free mice have lower hippocampal levels of BDNF relative to specific pathogen-free mice (Sudo et al., Reference Sudo, Chida, Aiba, Sonoda, Oyama, Yu, Kubo and Koga2004), and SCFAs can upregulate BDNF. Neuroinflammation, too, has a gut connection since the GM directly affects pro- and anti-inflammatory responses in the gut, and a leaky gut has been implicated in the pathogenesis of MDD. Increased gut permeability causes an influx of gut microbial components such as LPS, resulting in systemic inflammation and consequent neuroinflammation.

Could microbiome-based therapies help?

Studies suggest they can. FMT given to patients to treat symptoms of IBS has been found to have beneficial secondary effects on symptoms of depression (Huang et al., Reference Huang, Chen, Luo, Xu, He, Li, Zhou, Yao, Nie and Zhou2019), while a meta-analysis that pooled the results from 34 clinical trials concluded that probiotics have modest beneficial effects on depression and anxiety (Liu et al., Reference Liu, Walsh and Sheehan2019). Two randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials in this meta-analysis are explored in more detail. In the first study, 40 MDD patients were treated with a probiotic capsule (Lactobacillus acidophilus + Lacticaseibacillus casei + Bifidobacterium bifidum) or a placebo for 8 weeks. Significant improvements were seen in depressive symptoms, insulin resistance marker, and C-reactive protein in the probiotic group relative to controls (Akkasheh et al., Reference Akkasheh, Kashani-Poor, Tajabadi-Ebrahimi, Jafari, Akbari, Taghizadeh, Memarzadeh, Asemi and Esmaillzadeh2016). In the second study, 81 MDD patients were given probiotics (Lactobacillus helveticus R0052 + Bifidobacterium longum R0175), prebiotics (galacto-oligosaccharide) or a placebo for 8 weeks, with symptoms of depression significantly improving only in the probiotic group relative to controls (Kazemi et al., Reference Kazemi, Noorbala, Azam, Eskandari and Djafarian2019).

The latest research on LcS supported these observations; a 12-week open-label study of a LcS-fermented milk drink on patients with depression found improved depressive symptoms and sleep quality (Otaka et al., Reference Otaka, Kikuchi-Hayakawa, Ogura, Ishikawa, Yomogida, Ota, Hidese, Ishida, Aida, Matsuda, Kawai, Yoshida and Kunugi2021). Another study revealed that 8-week of treatment with a LcS-fermented milk drink significantly attenuated the stress-induced rise in salivary cortisol in medical students under academic stress (Takada et al., Reference Takada, Nishida, Kataoka-Kato, Gondo, Ishikawa, Suda, Kawai, Hoshi, Watanabe, Igarashi, Kuwano, Miyazaki and Rokutan2016). These results suggest that some probiotic strains can modulate stress-induced activation of the HPA axis and the subsequent onset of depression.

In summary, the GM is likely involved in the pathophysiology of MDD via several pathways, and GM modulators, including probiotics and FMT, could be helpful adjunct therapies.

Overcoming the brain barrier: a challenge for bacteria?

Implicating the GM in the pathophysiology of brain diseases and conditions requires that bacterial substances can access brain tissues. How this might occur was the topic reviewed by Prof. Roosmarijn Vandenbroucke from the Flanders Institute for Biotechnology (VIB) and Ghent University, Belgium.

The brain is protected from the peripheral circulation by central nervous system barriers, which include the blood–brain barrier (BBB) and the lesser-known blood-cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) barrier, which sits within the brain ventricles. Both barriers are characterised by being selectively permeable and having several parts to their structure, including a layer of epithelial cells in the case of the blood-CSF barrier and endothelial cells in the case of the BBB; both possessing tight junctions which regulate access. The choroid plexus epithelial cells at the blood-CSF barrier share similarities with those in the gut and have microvilli at their apical side, enhancing the surface area.

Barrier functions

There is a difference in permeability between the two barriers since the capillaries which sit underneath the choroid plexus epithelial cells that form the blood-CSF barrier are fenestrated (ie. leaky). This means no tight junction proteins connect the choroid plexus endothelial cells to one another (Vandenbroucke, Reference Vandenbroucke2016). The purpose of the choroid plexus is to remove waste products from the brain, act as its gatekeeper, and make CSF, a soup of different molecules, including nutrients, neurotrophins, and growth factors. The choroid plexus epithelial cells are in very close contact with the endothelial cells of the capillaries inside the choroid plexus. This enables them to respond to triggers from the peripheral circulation, such as cytokines, and consequently relay these peripheral signals to the brain, but how does this process occur?

One answer is via extracellular vesicles, cell-derived nanoparticles that transfer biological cargoes between cells and can cross the brain barriers bi-directionally, giving them a powerful influence across the body. Extracellular vesicles may originate from the body’s cells or from bacteria, which potentially explains how the GM could have an impact on the brain. This was demonstrated in an animal experiment (Balusu et al., Reference Balusu, Van Wonterghem, De Rycke, Raemdonck, Stremersch, Gevaert, Brkic, Demeestere, Vanhooren, Hendrix, Libert and Vandenbroucke2016b) where LPS was peripherally delivered, resulting in systemic inflammation and inflammation in brain cells. An extracellular vesicle inhibitor was then administered in the brain, which blocked the inflammatory signal to the brain, suggesting that extracellular vesicles act like a relay between the peripheral circulation and the brain. Animal studies suggest that a healthy GM is essential for the optimal development of the BBB since germ-free mice display increased BBB permeability compared with pathogen-free controls with normal GM (Braniste et al., Reference Braniste, Al-Asmakh, Kowal, Anuar, Abbaspour, Tóth, Korecka, Bakocevic, Ng, Kundu, Gulyás, Halldin, Hultenby, Nilsson, Hebert, Volpe, Diamond and Pettersson2014). There is also evidence that choroid plexus dysfunction via altered secretory, transport, and immune. Barrier function plays a central role in ageing and the risk of developing conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease (Balusu et al., Reference Balusu, Brkic, Libert and Vandenbroucke2016a). Hence, targeting the GM composition, or administrating SCFAs might have therapeutic potential.

Bacterial extracellular vesicles and brain diseases

The discovery of extracellular vesicles, especially those derived from bacteria, has advanced understanding of how gut dysbiosis may influence the initiation and progression of chronic progressive brain conditions. One example is the association between Helicobacter pylori, a gastrointestinal pathogen found in around half of adults, and an enhanced risk of Alzheimer’s disease. It has been hypothesised that bacterial-derived EVs, called outer membrane vesicles (OMV), if derived from Gram-negative bacteria, can cross the brain barriers, and initiate pathogenic changes, such as neuroinflammation or beta-amyloid plaque deposits (Xie et al., Reference Xie, Li, Haesebrouck, Van Hoecke and Vandenbroucke2022). This was studied by loading H. pylori OMV with cre enzyme and feeding these to tdTomato reporter mice, genetically engineered mice whose cells turn red when cre is taken up. This study showed an apparent increase in red astrocytes, confirming that H. pylori OMV had travelled from the gut to the brain, crossing the brain barriers (Xie et al., Reference Xie, Li, Haesebrouck, Van Hoecke and Vandenbroucke2022).

The impact of this was investigated by feeding wild-type mice with H. pylori-derived OMV and studying the activity of cells in the brain (Xie et al., Reference Xie, Cools, Van Imschoot, Van Wonterghem, Pauwels, Vlaeminck, De Witte, Andaloussi, Wierda, De Groef, Haesebrouck, Van Hoecke and Vandenbroucke2023). OMVs were found to overstimulate the microglia, leading to excessive synaptic pruning, evidenced by reduced dendrite length. Electrophysiological measurements then confirmed that H. pylori-derived OMV had detrimental effects on synaptic activity. To examine the clinical impact of OMV, a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease was treated with OMV for 3 weeks. The findings confirmed a significant effect on plaque deposition with more plaques and a larger plaque area than control mice. Hence, H. pylori OMV can access the brain and potentially accelerate pathogenic changes associated with Alzheimer’s disease. At this stage, it is unclear how the OMV are crossing the blood-CSF barrier.

In summary, a functioning blood-CSF barrier requires the presence of a GM and is strengthened by SCFA-producing taxa. Recent research shows that H. pylori OMV can enter the brain and accelerate changes associated with Alzheimer’s disease, such as glial activation and plaque deposition.

IBS: is it all between the ears?

This was the intriguing question asked by Prof. Francisco Guarner from the Teknon Medical Centre, Spain. Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is characterised by chronic, relapsing diarrhoea or constipation with no detectable cause. Bloating and pain are common symptoms (Lacy and Patel, Reference Lacy and Patel2017), often blamed on intestinal gas, but the symptoms could be due to heightened sensitivity to abdominal distention. This was demonstrated in an experiment (Barba et al., Reference Barba, Sánchez, Burri, Accarino, Monclus, Navazo, Guarner, Margolles and Azpiroz2019) where patients who had reported reactions after eating lettuce were given an abdominal computer tomography scan before and after eating this trigger food. Average post-prandial girth increased by 35 mm, representing an 835 ml expansion of intra-abdominal volume, but only 40 ml of this was due to extra gas, which was within the normal range. It was concluded that patients felt bloated because consuming lettuce led to a conditioned response of diaphragm displacement, with computer tomography scans showing an average diaphragm descent of 7 ± 3 mm. Following behavioural training, patients reduced their anxiety-related response to trigger foods by learning to control their diaphragm movement.

Is dietary restriction necessary for IBS?

The low FODMAP diet, which restricts poorly absorbed short-chain carbohydrates including fructose, lactose, polyols, fructans, and galacto-oligosaccharides, is a favoured treatment for IBS and resolves symptoms in 50–80 per cent of patients (Staudacher and Whelan, Reference Staudacher and Whelan2017). However, it entails short-to-medium term avoidance of certain foods, particularly plant-based foods, which may be neither convenient nor healthy for the patients. Hence, it may be better to employ cognitive behavioural therapy to condition a more positive response to trigger foods (Black et al., Reference Black, Thakur, Houghton, Quigley, Moayyedi and Ford2020). This has led to proposals that diet-induced symptoms in IBS are driven by dysregulation of the gut–brain axis since blinded interventions reveal similar increases in small bowel motility and colonic gas volume when IBS patients and healthy controls consume fructans (Wu et al., Reference Wu, Masuy, Biesiekierski, Fitzke, Parikh, Schofield, Shaikh, Bhagwanani, Aziz, Taylor, Tack and Van Oudenhove2022).

Gut bacteria create intestinal gas by fermenting carbohydrates which begs the question: do IBS patients have a particular GM profile? In one study (Manichanh et al., Reference Manichanh, Eck, Varela, Roca, Clemente, González, Knights, Knight, Estrella, Hernandez, Guyonnet, Accarino, Santos, Malagelada, Guarner and Azpiroz2014), patients complaining of flatus were compared with healthy controls before and after a 3-day challenge diet that was rich in plant foods. Even on the baseline “usual” diet, patients reported more abdominal symptoms and gas than controls, which worsened in both groups following the challenge diet. Changes in the GM of patients mirrored the increased symptoms, with Bilophila wadsworthia correlating with the increased volume of gas expelled. However, the GM of patients reduced in diversity and changed more radically in response to the challenge diet compared with the controls, which remained relatively stable. Hence, the GM of IBS patients, whether due to their habitual diets or other lifestyle factors, appears to be less adapted to digesting a plant-based diet and more adapted to digesting protein. This may lead to a predominance of gas-producing taxa.

Implications for wider health

While it is difficult to differentiate people with and without gut dysbiosis simply by looking at their GM, there are associations between digestive symptoms and particular taxa. Pozuelo et al. (Reference Pozuelo, Panda, Santiago, Mendez, Accarino, Santos, Guarner, Azpiroz and Manichanh2015) found that patients with IBS had significantly lower microbial diversity and fewer microorganisms that produce butyrate and methane. Since these are responsible for disposing of hydrogen in the gut, their lower abundance in people with IBS could explain the excess of abdominal gas. Prevotella was more associated with healthier controls; interestingly, these taxa can digest vegetable matter. IBS is not the only condition characterised by microbial indicators since a study in 8,208 Dutch adults found that the GM of people with cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and neurological conditions share microbiome commonalities and could be differentiated from the GM of healthy people (Gacesa et al., Reference Gacesa, Kurilshikov, Vich Vila, Sinha, Klaassen, Bolte, Andreu-Sánchez, Chen, Collij, Hu, Dekens, Lenters, Björk, Swarte, Swertz, Jansen, Gelderloos-Arends, Jankipersadsing, Hofker, Vermeulen, Sanna, Harmsen, Wijmenga, Fu, Zhernakova and Weersma2022).

If the healthy GM profile favours those species adapted to ferment fibre-rich plant substrates, could a low FODMAP diet, which typically restricts these foods, drive unhelpful changes in the GM? This could be true, according to research that finds that a low FODMAP diet leads to atrophy of taxa adapted to digest vegetables (Halmos et al., Reference Halmos, Christophersen, Bird, Shepherd, Gibson and Muir2015). Hence, alternative therapies are warranted to enable people with IBS to follow the recommended plant-rich diet for general health and disease prevention. Huaman et al. (Reference Huaman, Mego, Manichanh, Cañellas, Cañueto, Segurola, Jansana, Malagelada, Accarino, Vulevic, Tzortzis, Gibson, Saperas, Guarner and Azpiroz2018) combined a Mediterranean (Med) diet with a prebiotic (galacto-oligosaccharide), which was tested against a low FODMAP diet in a randomised controlled trial (RCT). Similar reductions in gut symptoms were seen after 4 weeks on both diets, except flatus which was reduced only after the low FODMAP diet. However, some of these benefits were not sustained, as symptoms reappeared immediately after patients discontinued the low FODMAP diet. In contrast, the benefits of the prebiotic-Med diet combination persisted during the 2-week follow-up when patients returned to their habitual diets. In addition, the diets had opposite effects on Bifidobacterium sp., with a decline seen after the low FODMAP diet versus an increase after the prebiotic-Med diet.

In summary, as plant-based diets are now widely recommended for health and disease prevention, it is important that people with IBS are supported to eat these by employing behavioural strategies, which condition a positive response to trigger foods, rather than managing their symptoms with trigger food avoidance.

Gut microbial diversity: one health and probiotics

Taking his cue from One Health – the European program which recognises the interconnectivity between the environment and human/animal health – Dr Olaf Larsen from Yakult Nederland and Vrije Universiteit, The Netherlands, discussed the role of microbial diversity, particularly of key taxa and guilds in promoting health.

The worldwide incidence of infectious diseases, including tuberculosis and measles, declined dramatically during 1950–2000 against a backdrop of rising autoimmune disorders, such as type 1 diabetes (T1D), Crohn’s disease, and asthma (Bach, Reference Bach2002). This trend continues in a more recent analysis (Larsen et al., Reference Larsen, van der Grint, Wiegers and van de Burgwal2022). In particular, T1D incidence has risen steadily in Europe and the US over the past 40 years. However, as demonstrated by the SARS epidemics and the SARS-Covid-19 pandemic, infectious diseases are far from being eradicated.

Old friends

While the fall in infections is understandable, given vaccines and improved hygiene standards, the reason for the rise in autoimmune problems is less clear and may be related to the health of our microbiota. One theory is that humans, especially in early childhood, have limited exposure to beneficial microbes from food and the environment – referred to as “old friends” – which leads to an overreactive immune system with the propensity to attack the body’s own tissues as well as overacting to harmless microorganisms or antigens. Indeed, studies show that diminished exposure to microorganisms in early life correlates with an increased risk of atopic diseases (Von Mutius et al., Reference von Mutius, Braun-Fahrländer, Schierl, Riedler, Ehlermann, Maisch, Waser and Nowak2000).

A deterioration in GM balance in Western countries has been cited as a reason for their greater burden of Covid-related mortality and higher rates of autoimmune and chronic non-communicable conditions. GM diversity correlates with risk (Dhar and Mohanty, Reference Dhar and Mohanty2020) and severity of Covid-19 (Yeoh et al., Reference Yeoh, Zuo, Lui, Zhang, Liu, Li, Chung, Cheung, Tso, Fung, Chan, Ling, Joynt, Hui, Chow, Ng, Li, Ng, Yip, Wong, Chan, Wong, Chan and Ng2021). It may also influence the development of metabolic syndrome (Fan and Pedersen, Reference Fan and Pedersen2021) which increased in prevalence from approximately 30 to 40 per cent of the US adult population during 2000–2018, emphasising the immense scale of this issue (Larsen et al., Reference Larsen, van der Grint, Wiegers and van de Burgwal2022). Completing the circle of disease risk, SARS-Covid-19 infection has been found to exacerbate metabolic disease (le Roux, Reference le Roux2021).

All of this indicates a need for Western populations to improve their exposure to “old friends” and regain microbiota eubiosis – considered to be a state of balance in the GM between beneficial and harmful bacteria, which is normally associated with a disease-free host. The human gut loses a proportion of the conserved microbiome with each successive generation, possibly related to incomplete maternal-child transmission (due to Caesarean births and lower than ideal breast-feeding rates) and excessive antibiotic use, which has remained relatively stable despite concerns about antibiotic resistance (Blaser and Falkow, Reference Blaser and Falkow2009). New exposures do not compensate for this decline in beneficial bacteria since society has adopted unhelpful practices of indoor living and diets lacking in fermented foods (FF). If these ecosystem losses continue, a catastrophic collapse in the GM is hypothesised leading to abrupt and possibly irreversible shifts between alternative ecosystem states (Larsen and van de Burgwal, Reference Larsen and van de Burgwal2021). Increasing GM diversity increases functionality, for example, SCFA production, but only if the right species are introduced. If the wrong diet and lifestyle are adopted, less favourable species could thrive, reducing ecosystem resilience and creating functional redundancy.

Keystone taxa and guilds

A balanced GM includes keystone (core) taxa and guilds. Keystone taxa are: “highly connected taxa that individually or in a guild exert a considerable influence on microbiome structure and functioning, irrespective of their abundance, [hence] their removal can cause a dramatic shift in microbiome structure and functioning.” (Banerjee et al., Reference Banerjee, Schlaeppi and van der Heijden2018). Guilds are small ecosystems where 2–10 taxa work together as coherent functional units or exploit the same type of resources (Maurice and Turnbaugh, Reference Maurice and Turnbaugh2018).

The absence of specific guilds has been linked with a greater risk of autoimmune conditions and certain metabolic diseases, but these guilds can be restored with the right interventions, which may include FMT, probiotics, or dietary fibres. In one RCT in people with type 2 diabetes, diets high in fibre promoted SCFA-producing strains at the expense of strains that produced potentially detrimental compounds such as indole and hydrogen sulphide (Zhao et al., Reference Zhao, Zhang, Ding, Wu, Lam, Wang, Fu, Xue, Lu, Ma, Yu, Xu, Ren, Xu, Xu, Shen, Zhu, Shi, Shen, Dong, Liu, Ling, Zeng, Wang, Zhang, Wang, Wang, Wu, Zeng, Wei, Zhang, Peng and Zhang2018). These GM changes in the high fibre group were associated with improved haemoglobin A1c levels. At present, the evidence is insufficient to determine whether single-strain or multistrain probiotics are more effective at restoring eubiosis (McFarland, Reference McFarland2021) although the theoretical research suggests a higher diversity in microbial guilds leads to a more efficient system. Hence, the choice of an appropriate probiotic should be based not on the number of strains in the product but on evidence-based efficacy trials. There is also an issue with non-responders which implies that a personalised approach is needed to determine the correct keystone taxa and guilds.

In summary, to avoid the risk of catastrophic collapse in the GM, we need to take a One Health approach to promote microbiota eubiosis. This includes greater biodiversity and exposure to “old friends,” appropriate substrates from high-fibre and plant-rich diets, as well as limiting antibiotic use and excessive hygiene.

Opportunities relating to functional foods

One source of “old friends” is traditional FF, according to Prof. Paul Cotter, from the Teagasc Food Research Centre and APC Microbiome Ireland, who reviewed some recent research on this topic.

FF are “foods made through desired microbial growth and enzymatic conversions of food components” (Marco et al., Reference Marco, Sanders, Gänzle, Arrieta, Cotter, De Vuyst, Hill, Holzapfel, Lebeer, Merenstein, Reid, Wolfe and Hutkins2021). Examples include kefir, sourdough bread, yoghurt, kimchi, and kombucha. The different microbes used to make FF determine the fermentation process, flavour, nutrients/bioactive compounds, and potential health benefits, including nutritive alteration of the ingredients, presence of bioactive compounds that affect intestinal and systemic function or modulation of the immune system. However, not all FF work as probiotics and referring to FF microorganisms as probiotics is misleading unless backed by evidence from human studies.

Used as a means to preserve foods, FF have a long history of use in nations around the world (Gänzle, Reference Gänzle2022; Jimenez et al., Reference Jimenez, O’Donovan, de Ullivarri and Cotter2022). The expansion of modern research techniques has helped investigate the microbiota of FF, highlighting differences across foods and, indeed, different versions of the same food type. This inherent variability has complicated standardisation, an issue further complicated by different standards and regulations between countries (Mukherjee et al., Reference Mukherjee, Gómez-Sala, O’Connor, Kenny and Cotter2022). As an example, the term “kefir” is reserved for dairy in some jurisdictions, eg. Germany, and cannot be applied to water kefirs.

Fermented food research

A global initiative was set up to apply shotgun metagenomic sequencing to a diverse range of FF, eventually sourcing 58 international artisan products (Leech et al., Reference Leech, Cabrera-Rubio, Walsh, Macori, Walsh, Barton, Finnegan, Crispie, ’Sullivan O, Claesson and Cotter2020). Food type, for example, dairy, brine- or sugar-based, was the primary driver of microbial composition, and foods within these clusters had more similar microbiomes than those from other clusters. Several FF did not fit with any cluster, including coconut kefir and soya-based foods for which there are relatively little data. Multiple potentially novel microbial species were identified, which could represent untapped functionality resources.

Further work (Pasolli et al., Reference Pasolli, De Filippis, Mauriello, Cumbo, Walsh, Leech, Cotter, Segata and Ercolini2020) has mapped lactic acid bacteria (LAB) species found in FF with those present in the human GM, finding that, for some species, closely related LAB strains occur in both food and gut environments. This provides new evidence that FF can be a source of LAB for the gut microbiome. The next phase will look at African FF as these have been under-researched. Africa offers a wealth of FF examples that contain microbes differing significantly from those found in FF from other continents.

Microbiome Applications for Sustainable food systems through Technologies and Enterprise (MASTER) is a new initiative that applies analytical techniques to FF typically used to study the human GM. One MASTER study (Cotter, personal communication) found specific clusters of microbial genes associated with colonisation, gut survival, modulation pathways, and human health within FF microbes. Indeed, FF contained significantly more health-associated gene clusters than non-fermented substrates, indicating the transformative influence of adding microbes to foods. The work could be used to identify which FF are worth testing in human clinical trials.

The example of water and milk kefir

Kefir grains contain a consortium of bacteria and yeasts, although the specific microorganisms in water and milk kefir grains are very different. Water kefir is a fermented beverage made by inoculating water kefir grains into a sugar (sucrose)-rich solution supplemented with fruits. Often made in a household setting, the mixture is left to stand at room temperature for 1 to 3 days, after which the grains are filtered out to obtain the final drink. A recent study (Mortensen, unpublished data) sourced water kefir grains from around the globe and fermented them with the same substrate. Heat maps based on microbial taxonomy revealed differences in α-diversity across countries and at least 10 clusters of microbial communities which may be important for flavour, shelf life, or health. This work could help define international standards for water kefirs, which tend to differ from country to country regarding their microbiome.

Milk kefir is made by fermenting milk with milk kefir grains. Research has identified specific microbes linked to volatile compounds which could help develop optimal flavour profiles for new products, for example adding Lactobacillus kefiranofaciens NCFB 2797 to increase fruitiness (Walsh et al., Reference Walsh, Crispie, Kilcawley, ’Sullivan O, O’Sullivan, Claesson and Cotter2016). This work is being expanded to 64 international milk kefir samples to determine theoretically which microbes could indicate potential health attributes. This is important as, while milk kefir has been linked with several health benefits including cholesterol reduction and antimicrobial activity, the quality of evidence is often poor (Bourrie et al., Reference Bourrie, Willing and Cotter2016). Notably, some animal studies evaluating the impact of kefir on obesity, dyslipidemia, and metabolic diseases suggest that the health-promoting attributes of kefir depend on specific microbes, which could explain why some kefirs do not produce any health effects (Bourrie et al., Reference Bourrie, Richard and Willing2020). Indeed, a study to deconstruct the microbes in artisan kefirs found that Lactobacillus and yeast were essential components for lowering plasma cholesterol in mice (Bourrie et al., Reference Bourrie, Ju, Fouhse, Forgie, Sergi, Cotter and Willing2021).

Ultimately, understanding which microbes in FF are important for health could help inform standards for commercial products and may eventually lead to population recommendations for specific microorganisms to be consumed through the diet.

Living foods: safe salvation for health

Continuing the theme of FF, Prof. Lorenzo Morelli, from the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Italy, described how modern research techniques can improve the understanding of traditional production methods.

Since around 7000 BC, humans have preserved protein-rich foods using different methods, including salt, smoke, and fermentation. The term fermentation comes from the Latin verb “fervere,” which means “to boil,” possibly referring to the bubbles seen when liquids are fermented. An example of a traditional FF is Parmesan cheese which is still made only with raw milk in copper pots using the previous day’s culture – called “back slopping.” Commercially available bacteria cultures are not permitted and the cheese must be ripened for more than a year for reasons of safety. There is good genetic evidence that these traditional methods have selected a sub-population of LAB whose chromosomes are adapted to making Parmesan cheese since they can grow at 51 °C, which is unusually high for such bacteria.

New methods to solve old problems

However, a weak point of traditional back slopping is the undefined age and viability of the bacterial cells, given that cheese-making requires the correct balance of lactic acid and viable cells. Older bacteria produce too much lactic acid which eventually kills the culture. Uncertainty can also be introduced by raw milk, whose composition and bacterial profile are influenced by different seasons and pastures. Newer research technologies can be used to address these traditional problems. In one study (Bellassi et al., Reference Bellassi, Rocchetti, Nocetti, Lucini, Masoero and Morelli2021), researchers used metabolomics and genomics to discriminate between milk produced by cows fed hay and milk from cows fed hay and fresh vegetables.

The bacteria used to make FF are multifunctional, transforming raw ingredients’ aroma, flavour, taste, and durability. It has been found that sourdough cultures are essential for flavour and leavening and act as natural preservatives (Bourdichon et al., Reference Bourdichon, Arias, Babuchowski, Bückle, Bello, Dubois, Fontana, Fritz, Kemperman, Laulund, McAuliffe, Miks, Papademas, Patrone, Sharma, Sliwinski, Stanton, Von Ah, Yao and Morelli2021). Biopreservation refers to enhanced food safety and extended shelf life of foods by indigenous and/or intentionally added microbiota, inhibiting the growth of pathogenic and spoilage organisms due to microbiological competition and production of antimicrobial metabolites (Shi and Maktabdar, Reference Shi and Maktabdar2022). This is an important attribute as consumers want foods to have a longer shelf life yet remain concerned about chemical preservatives and plastic packaging. There is a potential role for LAB against fungal spoilage of foods (Siedler et al., Reference Siedler, Balti and Neves2019), as demonstrated by an experiment that found that breads inoculated with mould were better preserved after 7 days when made with LAB compared with regular yeast. Modern techniques could be used to leverage these hitherto unknown benefits of cultures. The antimicrobial characteristics of several microorganisms are already recognised by generally recognised as safe (GRAS).

Human impact

LAB also interact with our bodies, as first recognised by Russian zoologist and Nobel laureate, Élie Metchnikoff (Mackowiak, Reference Mackowiak2013), who hypothesised in the early twentieth century that “intestinal putrefaction” shortens life but that lactic acid could be an antidote. This led him to be the earliest advocate of LAB as therapeutic agents and he is often considered the “father” of probiotics. While Metchnikoff’s original experiments could be described as hazardous – for example, injecting himself with pathogens or feeding lactic acid to volunteers – he went on to advocate the use of LAB in FF, stating in 1907: “Dependence of the intestinal microbes on the food makes it possible to adopt measures to modify the flora in our bodies and to replace the harmful microbes by useful microbes.

Metchnikoff incorrectly assumed that colonic bacteria could be modulated using supplemental lactic acid. Still, it is reasonable to assume that the GM could be influenced by a range of LAB by-products found in FF, including bioactive peptides (Ali et al., Reference Ali, Kamal, Rahman, Siddiqui, Haque, Saha and Rahman2022). These have been associated with anti-hypertensive, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitory, antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and immunomodulatory effects, which could deliver health benefits (Beltrán-Barrientos et al., Reference Beltrán-Barrientos, Hernández-Mendoza, Torres-Llanez, González-Córdova and Vallejo-Córdoba2016; Raveschot et al., Reference Raveschot, Cudennec, Coutte, Flahaut, Fremont, Drider and Dhulster2018). Bioactive peptides may also improve mineral bioavailability (Tenenbaum et al., Reference Tenenbaum, Deracinois, Dugardin, Matéos, Romelard, Auger, Boulier, Ravallec, Flahaut and Cudennec2022), which could support healthy ageing and the prevention of osteoporosis. Since the neurotransmitter γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) is one of the by-products of LAB metabolism, it has been hypothesised that FF could influence the brain. The potential anti-hypertensive effects of reduced sodium sourdough, made with Levilactobacillus brevis CECT 8183, were investigated in a laboratory study (Peñas et al., Reference Peñas, Diana, Frias, Quílez and Martínez-Villaluenga2015). The results showed significantly increased total antioxidant activity, GABA levels, and ACE inhibitory effects compared with the control bread, suggesting that innovative breads could be developed to reduce blood pressure.

Hence in summary, while there is a long history of humans using bacteria to preserve nutrients through fermentation, their interactions in our bodies and potential impact on health are only beginning to be understood.

Living drugs: a solution with many benefits

This narrative was continued by Prof. Stephan C. Bischoff, from the University of Hohenheim in Stuttgart, Germany, who described how FF evolved first into functional foods and supplement products, then medical applications. These require different approaches to safety assessment, regulation and methodologies to establish evidence of efficacy. This is because the purpose of probiotics has evolved from health maintenance to the prevention, management, or treatment of diseases and abnormal conditions.

Oral microbiota therapy can include probiotics, prebiotics, and postbiotics; the latter being inanimate microorganisms and/or their components that confer a health benefit on the host (Salminen et al., Reference Salminen, Collado, Endo, Hill, Lebeer, Quigley, Sanders, Shamir, Swann, Szajewska and Vinderola2021). For probiotic medical trials, it is crucial to consider strain, dosage, target population, disease type, and progression. Understanding mechanisms is also vital to support medical claims and ensure that the right probiotics are targeted at the right population of patients (Daliri et al., Reference Daliri, Ofosu, Xiuqin, Chelliah and Oh2021). Given recent advances in knowledge, relevant pathways of action include the gut–brain axis and the gut–liver axis, with the potential for probiotics to modulate a range of metabolic, inflammatory, and neurological conditions. So, where is the evidence currently?

Respiratory tract infections

Cochrane reviews are a gold standard of independent systematic review and meta-analysis (SRMA). In one of these, probiotics were found to lower the incidence but not the duration of respiratory tract infection (RTI) (OR 0.58; 95% CI 0.36–0.92) and reduced antibiotic prescriptions (0.67; 95% CI 0.45–0.98) (Hao et al., Reference Hao, Lu, Dong, Huang and Wu2011). These conclusions were confirmed in updated reviews of studies on adults and children (Hao et al., Reference Hao, Dong and Wu2015; Quick, Reference Quick2015). Other SRMAs have concluded that probiotics and prebiotics effectively improved response to the influenza vaccine (Lei et al., Reference Lei, Shih, Liu, Lin and Yeh2017), while fermented dairy products protected against RTI (Rashidi et al., Reference Rashidi, Razi, Darand, Dehghani, Janmohammadi and Alizadeh2021).

However, one issue with SRMAs is the heterogeneous approach to probiotic strains, that is, dosage and duration of the administration, which can create inconsistencies that make null conclusions more likely. Another issue is that SRMAs can be based on several small pilot trials subject to publication bias. Hence, there is a need to consider well-conducted large RCTs, of which several now exist:

Moving to the hospital environment, the severe condition of ventilator-associated pneumonia is a common issue for intensive care patients. Here, too, SRMAs have confirmed that probiotics have a therapeutic role in this condition, as there is robust evidence for a 30 per cent reduction in risk (Bo et al., Reference Bo, Li, Tao, Bai, Ye, Hotchkiss, Kollef, Crooks and Deng2014; Ji et al., Reference Ji, Zhu, Shang and Zhang2021; Sharif et al., Reference Sharif, Greer, Skorupski, Hao, Johnstone, Dionne, Lau, Manzanares, Eltorki, Duan, Lauzier, Marshall, Heels-Ansdell, Thabane, Cook and Rochwerg2022). A large RCT backs this using a 4-strain preparation (L. acidophilus, Lactiplantibacillus plantarum, Bifidobacterium animalis subsp. lactis, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae var boulardii) in 112 trauma patients (Tsilika et al., Reference Tsilika, Thoma, Aidoni, Tsaousi, Fotiadis, Stavrou, Malliou, Chorti, Massa, Antypa, Vasiliadou, Pagdatoglou, Voudouris, Vasiliagou, Mitos, Kontopoulou, Paraforou, Antoniadou, Mouloudi, Gkeka, Grosomanidis, Giamarellos-Bourboulis and Kotzampassi2022). However, another large RCT (n = 2,653) found no significant benefit of Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus GG for ventilator-associated pneumonia (Johnstone et al., Reference Johnstone, Meade, Lauzier, Marshall, Duan, Dionne, Arabi, Heels-Ansdell, Thabane, Lamarche, Surette, Zytaruk, Mehta, Dodek, McIntyre, English, Rochwerg, Karachi, Henderson, Wood, Ovakim, Herridge, Granton, Wilcox, Goffi, Stelfox, Niven, Muscedere, Lamontagne, D’Aragon, St-Arnaud, Ball, Nagpal, Girard, Aslanian, Charbonney, Williamson, Sligl, Friedrich, Adhikari, Marquis, Archambault, Khwaja, Kristof, Kutsogiannis, Zarychanski, Paunovic, Reeve, Lellouche, Hosek, Tsang, Binnie, Trop, Loubani, Hall, Cirone, Reynolds, Lysecki, Golan, Cartin-Ceba, Taylor and Cook2021).

Gastro-intestinal disorders

A major indication for probiotics is antibiotic-associated diarrhoea. The evidence for S. cerevisiae var boulardii and Lactoballicus sp. is so well established, with a risk reduction of more than 50 per cent (Szajewska and Kołodziej, Reference Szajewska and Kołodziej2015a, Reference Szajewska and Kołodziej2015b) that further data are unnecessary.

Probiotics are also recommended in the German IBS guidelines since few effective drug treatments exist for this condition (Layer et al., Reference Layer, Andresen, Allescher, Bischoff, Claßen, Elsenbruch, Freitag, Frieling, Gebhard, Goebel-Stengel, Häuser, Holtmann, Keller, Kreis, Kruis, Langhorst, Jansen, Madisch, Mönnikes, Müller-Lissner, Niesler, Pehl, Pohl, Raithel, Röhrig-Herzog, Schemann, Schmiedel, Schwille-Kiuntke, Storr, Preiß, Andus, Buderus, Ehlert, Engel, Enninger, Fischbach, Gillessen, Gschossmann, Gundling, Haag, Helwig, Hollerbach, Karaus, Katschinski, Krammer, Kuhlbusch-Zicklam, Matthes, Menge, Miehlke, Posovszky, Schaefert, Schmidt-Choudhury, Schwandner, Schweinlin, Seidl, Stengel, Tesarz, van der Voort, Voderholzer, von Boyen, von Schönfeld and Wedel2021). However, the opposite is true for inflammatory bowel diseases, such as ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease, where probiotics offer weak beneficial effects that are inferior to drugs (Kaur et al., Reference Kaur, Gordon, Baines, Iheozor-Ejiofor, Sinopoulou and Akobeng2020). Small intestine bacterial overload results from gut dysbiosis and is characterised by bloating, pain, and post-prandial diarrhoea. A SRMA by Zhong et al. (Reference Zhong, Qu, Wang, Liang and Zeng2017) found that probiotics could not prevent small intestine bacterial overload but lowered gut hydrogen levels and improved treatment efficacy, including for abdominal pain. German guidelines indicate that it is best practice to use probiotics alongside antibiotics and a low FODMAP diet (Layer et al., Reference Layer, Andresen, Allescher, Bischoff, Claßen, Elsenbruch, Freitag, Frieling, Gebhard, Goebel-Stengel, Häuser, Holtmann, Keller, Kreis, Kruis, Langhorst, Jansen, Madisch, Mönnikes, Müller-Lissner, Niesler, Pehl, Pohl, Raithel, Röhrig-Herzog, Schemann, Schmiedel, Schwille-Kiuntke, Storr, Preiß, Andus, Buderus, Ehlert, Engel, Enninger, Fischbach, Gillessen, Gschossmann, Gundling, Haag, Helwig, Hollerbach, Karaus, Katschinski, Krammer, Kuhlbusch-Zicklam, Matthes, Menge, Miehlke, Posovszky, Schaefert, Schmidt-Choudhury, Schwandner, Schweinlin, Seidl, Stengel, Tesarz, van der Voort, Voderholzer, von Boyen, von Schönfeld and Wedel2021).

In medicine, probiotics are most effective for RTI and gastrointestinal conditions. In the future, probiotics could treat other types of conditions such as metabolic syndrome, obesity, and neurological diseases but, to do this, new probiotics need to be discovered and tested in clinical trials. In a recent trial (Gutiérrez-Castrellón et al., Reference Gutiérrez-Castrellón, Gandara-Martí, Abreu, Abreu, Nieto-Rufino, López-Orduña, Jiménez-Escobar, Jiménez-Gutiérrez, López-Velazquez and Espadaler-Mazo2022) a new patented 4-strain probiotic improved remission rates and viral load in patients with SARS-Covid-19. Further research and product development are required to deliver the advantages of living drugs to all parts of the body.

Safety of microorganisms used as probiotics

Before being included in the food system, microorganisms must be risk assessed to ensure consumer safety. Is the current system fit for this purpose? This was discussed by Prof. Pier-Sandro Cocconcelli from the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Italy, who identified four trends in risk assessment (RA).

Microorganisms are deliberately introduced into the food chain to assist food production (eg. to create FF) and to benefit animal and human health. RA involves hazard identification and characterisation, exposure assessment, and risk characterisation, but this system was designed with pathogens, not probiotics, in mind. Hence, adjustment is needed to enable the system to provide adequate assessment, for example, using dosage data from intervention studies rather than population exposure.

Trend #1: the process of RA is rapidly evolving

Guidance on regulating microorganisms in food and feed has been rapidly evolving in Europe since 2005 due to the evolution of methodologies which have become increasingly complex since the advent of genomics.

Trend #2: increased complexity of microbial RA

The RA system for microorganisms combines taxonomy, genomics, a qualified presumption of safety (QPS), AMR, virulence, and end-use. QPS is a fast-track approach that reduces unnecessary extensive safety testing by utilising the body of knowledge on the species plus a safety decision tree. It differs from the US system of GRAS, which is generally limited to a specific application made following a safety assessment (Franz et al., Reference Franz, Huch, Abriouel, Gálvez, Semedo-Lemsaddek, Barreto-Crespo and Nova2011).

More than 100 microorganisms have been granted QPS status in Europe, but their evidence is still updated bi-annually to ensure safety. For new microorganisms, the decision tree is followed and if QPS is not given, a full safety assessment is required. Even for QPS microbes, evidence of acquired AMR means that no approval will be given since the food system should not add to the burden of AMR and enable these genes to be mobilised in the human or animal gut. In contrast, intrinsic AMR is not considered a safety concern if this is inherent to wild-type bacterial species.

Trend #3: genomics is fundamentally changing RA approaches

Some microorganisms have multiple characteristics ranging from pathogen to food culture, which taxonomy alone does not recognise; hence, genomic methods are needed. One example is Enterococcus faecium which can be a pathogenic, commensal, food culture, or probiotic organism, depending on the clade. While EFSA has produced guidance on genomics (European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), 2021), it refers to methods rather than purpose. In contrast, microbial RA is concerned with identification, genetic modification, and finding AMR genes, which suggests that the guidance on genomics needs updating.

Genomic techniques provide precise information on microbial phylogenesis but add complexity, making combining old and new data harder. In the case of E. faecium, gene sequencing can enable specific AMR genes to be identified. However, it can also overturn previous taxonomy as a study (Belloso Daza et al., Reference Belloso Daza, Cortimiglia, Bassi and Cocconcelli2021) concluded that clade B of E. faecium should be reassigned as Enterococcus lactis. Yet, while genomics may be suitable for identification, it still cannot tell us if microorganisms are safe. To do this, RA requires phenotypic testing based on determining a minimum inhibitory concentration of the potentially resistant gene and whole-genome sequencing to search for known AMR genes. In the example of E. faecium, whole-gene sequencing found mobilizable AMR genes in a sample taken from ready-to-eat sausages (Belloso Daza et al., Reference Belloso Daza, Milani, Cortimiglia, Pietta, Bassi and Cocconcelli2022), highlighting the need for constant vigilance.

Yet, there remain shortcomings in using genomics to determine pathogenicity since genes for successful gut colonisation could act to promote virulence in a pathogen or survivability in a probiotic. Also, the definition and application of “intrinsic resistance” are not absolute, and there is a non-alignment between international regulatory bodies. Hence, an evolving approach to RA is needed.

Trend #4: new products and applications

This impacts RA because it extends the continuum from natural to synthetic microorganisms. Synthetic biology is the application of science, technology, and engineering to facilitate and accelerate the design, manufacture, and/or modification of genetic materials in living organisms (SCENIHR et al., 2014). As new microorganisms could be potentially indistinguishable from non-genetically modified versions, RA should be based on the nature of the final strain and not on the methodology used to get there. The EU is considering how to regulate this area since genetically modified microorganisms are already present in non-EU markets. Another consideration is the RA of non-viable cells used in the food supply, such as postbiotics, which could be treated like biomasses or novel foods.

In summary, the regulatory system is still evolving to ensure proper RA of potentially useful microorganisms, aided by advancements in methodologies.

The importance of the responder/non-responder issue for clinical trials

RA and authorization of health claims depend on high-quality evidence. Yet, the gold standard RCT may not be the most appropriate for nutrition research, including trials of probiotics, argues Prof. Robert Jan Brummer from Örebro University, Sweden.

In the hierarchy of medical evidence, the RCT is near the top, only surpassed by systematic reviews and meta-analyses of RCTs. While these types of studies undoubtedly work for medicine where drug compounds are standardised, relatively constant, and produce a large signal-to-noise ratio (ie. the effect of the intervention compared with the effect of interpersonal variations), they may not be appropriate for other health interventions which are not standardised, eg. because they are natural foods or ingredients, or where subtle changes in health are seen in the long term. Hence, the RCT model only works effectively to provide evidence of efficacy where certain assumptions can be made ie:

  • External validity – being able to generalise the findings of RCTs to a defined population;

  • Independence of effects – where the observed effect is most likely due to the intervention and not a confounding variable;

  • Adequate characterisation of the intervention and placebo (Zeilstra et al., Reference Zeilstra, Younes, Brummer and Kleerebezem2018).

These assumptions may not always be valid for nutritional interventions, such as dietary interventions or probiotics, which can often yield inconsistent results in RCTs, which are then amplified in meta-analyses.

External validity

To be clinically useful, nutritional interventions must work in a definable group of people (age, sex, health status, nutritional status) in a particular public health or hospital setting. Lack of external validity is one explanation for the widespread underuse in the routine practice of many treatments that were shown beneficial in trials and are recommended in guidelines (Rothwell, Reference Rothwell2006). Inter-individual variation in participant response is a barrier to external validity because, unlike pharmaceuticals, nutritional interventions often have subtle effects which can be overwhelmed by the background “noise” created by many individual variations in clinical response. A larger sample size does not help since this often increases the heterogeneity of the study population and inter-individual variation. One example is a hypertensive drug which would be expected to deliver a fall in systolic blood pressure of 10–15 mmHg (Paz et al., Reference Paz, de-La-Sierra, Sáez, Barceló, Rodríguez, Castro, Lagarón, Garrido, Vera and Coll-de-Tuero2016), considerably greater in magnitude than the anticipated 4 mmHg fall from a 4 g reduction in salt intake (He et al., Reference He, Li and Macgregor2013) which would be a significant dietary shift for the target population. Hence, in the presence of non-compliance and intra-individual variation, the dietary intervention must work harder than a pharmaceutical treatment to achieve a statistically significant result.

Independence of effects

It would be illogical to combine all brands of hypertensive drugs into one RCT. Yet, trials of probiotics often mix species and strains into one intervention, reducing the chances of a clear, unambiguous result. This is then compounded by systematic reviews and meta-analyses that pool studies using various strains. Different strains of probiotics have different clinical effects, making it necessary to understand the mode of action to select the correct outcome variable and patient group. It is also essential to control the potential for bias, particularly from the rest of the diet.

Adequate characterisation

It is a fundamental error to assume that probiotics are standardised simply because they can be put into capsules like drugs. Probiotics are living organisms that evolve once they reach the recipient’s colon, depending on the available substrates provided by the diet, eg. the amount and types of fermentable carbohydrates and proteins. This means that the same product does not deliver the same treatment in every recipient; thus, in the case of probiotics, the idea that the treatment is well-defined may be questionable (Zeilstra et al., Reference Zeilstra, Younes, Brummer and Kleerebezem2018).

Way forward

Three concepts may be considered to address the issues of inter- and intra-individual variation. Firstly, by considering responsive nutrition, which aims to target interventions by identifying likely responders through machine learning analysis of health, genetic, drug, and dietary data. This could create a phenotype for optimal responsiveness, which could help target probiotic interventions to those most likely to respond. Responsive nutrition differs from personal nutrition. The latter focuses on providing the best dietary intervention on an individual basis. Secondly, by trying to limit intra-individual variation as far as possible. This could be done by conducting many trials, on fewer people with a stable background pattern of the primary outcome measure, rather than one trial on many people with unspecified intra-individual variation (Larsen et al., Reference Larsen, Claassen and Brummer2020). Thirdly, by using surrogate biomarkers which show short-term changes predictive of a health effect instead of using medium-term disease markers which other lifestyle factors may influence. One example is functional brain imaging which, in a 4-week RCT of probiotics (Rode et al., Reference Rode, Edebol Carlman, König, Hutchinson, Thunberg, Persson and Brummer2022), demonstrated significant changes in brain morphology and resting-state brain function linked to stress management of the brain.

In summary, non-response and intra-individual variation hamper a clear understanding of the efficacy of probiotics, and we need to look beyond the classic RCT design to overcome this challenge.

Development of the infant microbiota

Turning from foods back to the human body, Prof. Christoph Lacroix, from ETH Zurich, Switzerland, described the acquisition of the microbiome in infanthood and discussed how different lifestyle and environmental factors can influence which taxa thrive, hence, which functions are expressed.

From the sterile environment of the womb, the infant’s gut is rapidly colonised by pioneer microorganisms (Khan et al., Reference Khan, Hansen, Scott, Martin, Berry, Stevenson, Okapapi, Hold and Munro2015), evolving in terms of taxa and diversity over the first few years. This remains relatively stable until old age, when diversity declines. Modern techniques like metagenomics enable us to look at microbial function over the life course, which is more important than taxonomy.

GM acquisition

Initially dominated by LAB, the infant gut microbiome changes most rapidly between the ages of 1 and 6 months with the cessation of breast-feeding, rather than the introduction of solid food, correlating with maturation into an adult-type microbiota (Bäckhed et al., Reference Bäckhed, Roswall, Peng, Feng, Jia, Kovatcheva-Datchary, Li, Xia, Xie, Zhong, Khan, Zhang, Li, Xiao, Al-Aama, Zhang, Lee, Kotowska, Colding, Tremaroli, Yin, Bergman, Xu, Madsen, Kristiansen, Dahlgren and Wang2015). Building on this research, Roswall et al. (Reference Roswall, Olsson, Kovatcheva-Datchary, Nilsson, Tremaroli, Simon, Kiilerich, Akrami, Krämer, Uhlén, Gummesson, Kristiansen, Dahlgren and Bäckhed2021) conducted a longitudinal cohort of 471 healthy Swedish children to track the development of the GM from birth to 5 years, noting four discrete trajectories for different microbes. The greatest changes occurred in the first year of life, and by the age of 3–5 years, the child GM was closest to that of adults, although still evolving.

Roswall et al. (Reference Roswall, Olsson, Kovatcheva-Datchary, Nilsson, Tremaroli, Simon, Kiilerich, Akrami, Krämer, Uhlén, Gummesson, Kristiansen, Dahlgren and Bäckhed2021) identified four major trajectories for individual genera in the developing GM of infants and young children, with some genera peaking at 4–12 months, others increasing rapidly between 4–12 months before stabilising by 3 years, and a final group increasing in relative abundance after 12 months and continuing to increase until 5 years. These shifts were linked to the cessation of breast feeding, the introduction of solids, increased socialisation outside the family and increased diet diversity.

Both vertical (from the mother) and horizontal (from the birth environment) transmission determine which pioneer species colonise the post-natal gut. Factors include maternal diet and health, vaginal versus Caesarean birth, skin-to-skin contact, breast or bottle feeding, and antibiotic use (Marques et al., Reference Marques, Wall, Ross, Fitzgerald, Ryan and Stanton2010). Molecular methods have revealed the presence of more microorganisms in human milk than previously believed, such as skin bacteria, Bacteroidota phylum, and clostridia (Selma-Royo et al., Reference Selma-Royo, Calvo-Lerma, Bäuerl, Esteban-Torres, Cabrera-Rubio and Collado2022). Indeed, the bacterial diversity of human milk may even exceed that of neonatal faeces (Jost et al., Reference Jost, Lacroix, Braegger and Chassard2013). However, this could be explained by different population densities and structures and the limited resolution of the sequencing methods. There is also evidence of bacterial translocation through the entero-mammary pathway since similar strict anaerobe species and strains have been found in maternal faeces, breast milk, and infant faeces (Perez et al., Reference Perez, Doré, Leclerc, Levenez, Benyacoub, Serrant, Segura-Roggero, Schiffrin and Donnet-Hughes2007).

Beneficial role of microbes

A comprehensive study tracked the impact of breastfeeding on GM changes in seven healthy neonates aged 4 to 30 days (Jost et al., Reference Jost, Lacroix, Braegger and Chassard2012). Neonate faeces were dominated either by Bifidobacterium or Bacteroides sp. Strict anaerobes outnumbered facultative anaerobes within the first days, which was earlier than assumed, but major adult-type butyrate producers, such as Roseburia and Faecalibacterium, were not detected. While most infant gut bacteria are lactate producers from the main dietary carbohydrate lactose, some species must metabolise lactate, potentially toxic if allowed to accumulate, mainly into propionate (Chassard et al., Reference Chassard, de Wouters and Lacroix2014). Sulphate-reducing bacteria can remove hydrogen, a secondary metabolite produced by different taxa of the infant gut such as clostridia and Veillonella that may be linked to bloating and colic.

Such findings have led to the hypothesis that infants with colic may have more hydrogen-producing bacteria and/or fewer bacteria that can metabolise lactate and hydrogen. This was demonstrated in a 2-year prospective cohort study of 40 infants, including 8 with colic, which also found that peak lactate production occurred when infants were 2–3 months (Pham et al., Reference Pham, Lacroix, Braegger and Chassard2017). Further research revealed a switch between the lactate-utilizer, hydrogen-producer Veillonella in the first year of life to the lactate-utilizer butyrate-producer, Anaerobutyricum hallii, in the second year of life, which was associated with weaning (Pham et al., Reference Pham, Greppi, Chassard, Braegger and Lacroix2022).

This was tested further in a gnotobiotic model (Rocha Martin et al., Reference Rocha Martin, Del’Homme, Chassard, Schwab, Braegger, Bernalier-Donadille and Lacroix2022) where rats were inoculated with faeces from healthy infants or those with colic. After milk formula feeding, rats with colic-associated microbiota produced significantly more hydrogen in faeces and had a higher abundance of Veillonella than healthy controls. Supplementation of the lactate-utilizer and propionate-producer Cutibacterium avidum P279 to rats with the colic-associated microbiota reduced gut hydrogen levels compared with animals receiving a placebo. The results confirm the benefit of cross-feeding between bacteria in the infant gut and suggest that targeted probiotics could help to manage colic.

In summary, these studies suggest a broad window of opportunity for dietary interventions tailored to support the evolving infant GM. A good example is the promotion of taxa involved in lactate and hydrogen cross-feeding to help address infant colic. However, more research is needed to understand better the mechanisms and functions of the infant GM, particularly from low- and middle-income countries.

Microbiota composition from 1 till 100

Beyond infanthood, the GM continues to change, with implications for long-term health, as discussed by Prof. Gaspar Pérez Martínez from the Institute of Agrochemistry and Food Technology (CSIC), Spain.

The microbiome clock

While the GM of infants and adults differ in species, diversity, and functionality, a quantitative theory of intestinal ageing remains elusive because there are no recognised step changes in GM during adulthood. Some older adults have a GM similar to younger people, and there is an overlap between clusters of signature species linked to decades of life.

In a study of 367 healthy Japanese volunteers (Odamaki et al., Reference Odamaki, Kato, Sugahara, Hashikura, Takahashi, Xiao, Abe and Osawa2016) from infanthood to very old age, bifidobacteria dominated in early life, but the relative abundance of Actinomycetota (formerly the Actinobacteria) substantially declined after weaning and was progressively replaced by Bacillota (formerly the Firmicutes). A further change occurred around 70 years when increases were seen in the relative abundance of Bacteroidota and Pseudomonadota while Bacillota declined. Using samples from 1,165 adults, a machine learning model could predict a healthy person’s age from their GM to an accuracy of fewer than 6 years. However, this did not work for patients with T1D who exhibited microbiome age acceleration (Galkin et al., Reference Galkin, Mamoshina, Aliper, Putin, Moskalev, Gladyshev and Zhavoronkov2020). In a different study (Bian et al., Reference Bian, Gloor, Gong, Jia, Zhang, Hu, Zhang, Zhang, Zhou, Zhang, Burton, Reid, Xiao, Zeng, Yang and Li2017) with 1,000 healthy Chinese volunteers, GM patterns showed remarkable similarities between healthy aged and younger adults for overall GM composition, a fact observed in previous studies (Odamaki et al., Reference Odamaki, Kato, Sugahara, Hashikura, Takahashi, Xiao, Abe and Osawa2016). In this case, health was a better predictor of GM ageing than years of life. Interestingly, this study also revealed a stable diversity across all age categories, with a shift in GM profiles around 19–24 years of age which could reflect changes in hormones or lifestyles, eg. going to university or the army.

Factors affecting GM composition across life

Five factors were outlined: environment, diet, genetics, antibiotics, and health.

Environment

Children exposed to less urbanised environments have a lower risk of autoimmune conditions. Studies in Finnish and German children (Kirjavainen et al., Reference Kirjavainen, Karvonen, Adams, Täubel, Roponen, Tuoresmäki, Loss, Jayaprakash, Depner, Ege, Renz, Pfefferle, Schaub, Lauener, Hyvärinen, Knight, Heederik, von Mutius and Pekkanen2019) found a reduced incidence of asthma in farm-raised children, with the indoor dust of farmhouses having a lower abundance of Streptococcaceae. Asthma risk in children who did not live on farms decreased as their home microbiota composition became more like farm homes. Studies on tribal people have found a distinct and far richer GM diversity compared to industrialised populations (Clemente et al., Reference Clemente, Pehrsson, Blaser, Sandhu, Gao, Wang, Magris, Hidalgo, Contreras, Noya-Alarcón, Lander, McDonald, Cox, Walter, Oh, Ruiz, Rodriguez, Shen, Song, Metcalf, Knight, Dantas and Dominguez-Bello2015; Conteville et al., Reference Conteville, Oliveira-Ferreira and Vicente2019), which could reflect the absence of antibiotics and differences in physical activity, diet, and exposure to outdoor microorganisms. People who exercise have a greater alpha diversity than sedentary people but few differences in taxa. The largest difference is in the metabolomics profile since regular exercisers have higher faecal SCFAs and harbour a greater proportion of phyla that break down carbohydrates, probably reflecting their habitual diets.

Diet

The GM responds to diet as it determines available substrates. A multi-centre metagenomics study (Arumugam et al., Reference Arumugam, Raes, Pelletier, Le Paslier, Yamada, Mende, Fernandes, Tap, Bruls, Batto, Bertalan, Borruel, Casellas, Fernandez, Gautier, Hansen, Hattori, Hayashi, Kleerebezem, Kurokawa, Leclerc, Levenez, Manichanh, Nielsen, Nielsen, Pons, Poulain, Qin, Sicheritz-Ponten, Tims, Torrents, Ugarte, Zoetendal, Wang, Guarner, Pedersen, de Vos, Brunak, Doré, Antolín, Artiguenave, Blottiere, Almeida, Brechot, Cara, Chervaux, Cultrone, Delorme, Denariaz, Dervyn, Foerstner, Friss, van de Guchte, Guedon, Haimet, Huber, van Hylckama-Vlieg, Jamet, Juste, Kaci, Knol, Lakhdari, Layec, Le Roux, Maguin, Mérieux, Melo Minardi, M’rini, Muller, Oozeer, Parkhill, Renault, Rescigno, Sanchez, Sunagawa, Torrejon, Turner, Vandemeulebrouck, Varela, Winogradsky, Zeller, Weissenbach, Ehrlich and Bork2011) found three distinct clusters of GM composition associated with substrates rather than nationality. Subsequent studies collapsed these into two distinctive groups correlated with animal fat consumption: protein and simple sugars (Bacteroides group) or vegetables, complex carbohydrates, and fibre (Prevotella group). This was seen in practice when the GM was studied in people with different diets (De Filippis et al., Reference De Filippis, Pellegrini, Vannini, Jeffery, La Storia, Laghi, Serrazanetti, Di Cagno, Ferrocino, Lazzi, Turroni, Cocolin, Brigidi, Neviani, Gobbetti, O’Toole and Ercolini2016). Prevotellaceae were more abundant with plant-based diets, while Bacteroidota were more abundant in vegans and vegetarians than in omnivores. However, higher faecal SCFAs were seen with high dietary compliance, even in omnivores, when split by adherence to the Med diet. Changing the diet from meat-based to vegetarian, or vice-versa, can alter the GM, but only while the diet is maintained. Habitual vegetarians return more quickly to their baseline GM after resuming their usual diets (David et al., Reference David, Maurice, Carmody, Gootenberg, Button, Wolfe, Ling, Devlin, Varma, Fischbach, Biddinger, Dutton and Turnbaugh2014). Consuming a functional drink based on Cyperus esculentus L. (tiger nuts) also shifted the GM pattern towards SCFA producers, but this depended on the baseline microbiome of each individual (Selma-Royo et al., Reference Selma-Royo, García-Mantrana, Collado and Perez-Martínez2022).

Genetics

A study of UK twins (Goodrich et al., Reference Goodrich, Davenport, Beaumont, Jackson, Knight, Ober, Spector, Bell, Clark and Ley2016) uncovered familial hereditary lineages with greater similarities within the Ruminococcaceae and Lachnospiraceae families for monozygotic compared to dizygotic twins. An analysis of faecal samples from 71 individuals found that the diversity and composition of bifidobacteria were strongly associated with the histo-blood group ABH secretor/non-secretor status, which appears to be one of the host genetic determinants for GM composition (Wacklin et al., Reference Wacklin, Mäkivuokko, Alakulppi, Nikkilä, Tenkanen, Räbinä, Partanen, Aranko and Mättö2011).

Antibiotics

While having an overall positive influence on human health, antibiotics nevertheless inflict ecological disaster on the GM, wiping out helpful species alongside pathogens. The GM does regrow but typically does not achieve the same balance of species, particularly in people taking repeated antibiotic courses. Some individuals never recover their baseline GM (Chng et al., Reference Chng, Ghosh, Tan, Nandi, Lee, Ng, Li, Ravikrishnan, Lim, Lye, Barkham, Raman, Chen, Chai, Young, Gan and Nagarajan2020). A SRMA (Duong et al., Reference Duong, Pittet, Curtis and Zimmerman2022) of observational studies found an increased long-term risk of auto-immune conditions and obesity in children given multiple antibiotic courses.

Health

Certain conditions have an impact on the GM. Coeliac disease changes the balance of GM species and increases diversity, while the time window between seroconversion and T1D in genetically susceptible children is characterised by reduced alpha diversity and a higher prevalence of species linked to inflammation (Kostic et al., Reference Kostic, Gevers, Siljander, Vatanen, Hyötyläinen, Hämäläinen, Peet, Tillmann, Pöhö, Mattila, Lähdesmäki, Franzosa, Vaarala, de Goffau, Harmsen, Ilonen, Virtanen, Clish, Orešič, Huttenhower, Knip and Xavier2015). These observations fit with the broader theory of gut dysbiosis affecting the aetiology of several chronic diseases, which could also be bi-directional, as demonstrated by the finding that sepsis induces low-grade inflammation and oxidative stress in the gut via such as TNF-α and interleukin-1β. This adversely changes GM balance since Reactive Oxygen Species have selective antibacterial effects (Cernada et al., Reference Cernada, Bäuerl, Serna, Collado, Martínez and Vento2016). At the other end of the age spectrum, there are associations between GM changes and the initiation of immunosenescence (Candore et al., Reference Candore, Balistreri, Colonna-Romano, Grimaldi, Lio, Listi’, Scola, Vasto and Caruso2008).

GM changes in the young and old

Continuing the theme of looking at society’s oldest people, Prof. Patrizia Brigidi, from the University of Bologna, Italy, discussed the GM of centenarians using data on individuals from four distinct age groups (young, elderly, centenarians, and semi-supercentenarians) living in the same geographical area of Italy (Biagi et al., Reference Biagi, Franceschi, Rampelli, Severgnini, Ostan, Turroni, Consolandi, Quercia, Scurti, Monti, Capri, Brigidi and Candela2016).

Age is a key variable that impacts GM composition and function and represents an adaptive trajectory across the human lifecycle (Rampelli et al., Reference Rampelli, Soverini, D’Amico, Barone, Tavella, Monti, Capri, Astolfi, Brigidi, Biagi, Franceschi, Turroni and Candela2020). GM changes provide the host with ecological services calibrated to each stage of life. For example, the relative importance of vitamin biosynthesis, fermentation, RNA degradation, and bile salt metabolism varies with age (Lynch and Pedersen, Reference Lynch and Pedersen2016). In particular, age-related changes impact on the GM composition and its crosstalk with the host, nurturing inflammageing, a chronic low-grade inflammatory status characteristic of advanced age, immunosenescence and metabolic disorders. These include changes in lifestyle, nutritional behaviour, prescribed drug use, and gut physiology and functionality such as reduced intestinal motility and increased intestinal permeability.

Healthy semi-super centenarians, aged 105–109 years, represent a good model for studying healthy ageing as they have survived for 20 years longer than their demographic cohort and somehow escaped the major chronic age-related disorders and causes of mortality. The GM of this group was compared with three other sub-groups with mean ages of 100, 72.5, and 30.5 years based on 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing analyses (Biagi et al., Reference Biagi, Franceschi, Rampelli, Severgnini, Ostan, Turroni, Consolandi, Quercia, Scurti, Monti, Capri, Brigidi and Candela2016). The GM composition in the youngest and oldest groups could be clearly differentiated, with the middle age groups having some overlap as well as age-related biodiversity decline. A core of highly prevalent bacteria, mostly belonging to Ruminococcaceae, Lachnospiraceae, and Bacteroidaceae families was detected whose abundance decreased during ageing, leaving space for the growth of subdominant species.

Further research has observed that the GM of long-lived individuals is characterised by a rearrangement in the Bacillota population, with a decline in F. prausnitzii and enrichment in facultative anaerobes, notably pathobionts, which correlates with an increase of the inflammatory status (Lynch and Pedersen, Reference Lynch and Pedersen2016). Similar findings have been reported from other longevity parts of the world (Kim et al., Reference Kim, Kwon, Kam, Panicker, Karuppagounder, Lee, Lee, Kim, Kook, Foss, Shen, Lee, Kulkarni, Pasricha, Lee, Pomper, Dawson, Dawson and Ko2019; Ren et al., Reference Ren, Li, Fu and Li2021). However, the GM of the semi-supercentenarians had greater enrichment of health-associated groups (eg. Akkermansia, Bifidobacterium, and Christensenellaceae); a key difference from the GM of centenarians.

Metagenomics has been used to examine the functions of bacteria in the GM of older people (Lynch and Pedersen, Reference Lynch and Pedersen2016). This has revealed a rearrangement in metabolic pathways related to carbohydrate and amino acid metabolism in agreement with the loss of Eubacterium and Faecalibacterium and the increase of Pseudomonadota sp. The shift from a saccharolytic to a proteolytic profile induces a marked decrease in SCFA production and availability of tryptophan and an increase in indolic metabolites, which correlate with cognitive impairment, inflammation, and cancer. The aged GM was also enriched in microorganisms capable of generating unique secondary bile acids, which could be involved in reducing the risk of infection with pathobionts (Sato et al., Reference Sato, Atarashi, Plichta, Arai, Sasajima, Kearney, Suda, Takeshita, Sasaki, Okamoto, Skelly, Okamura, Vlamakis, Li, Tanoue, Takei, Nittono, Narushima, Irie, Itoh, Moriya, Sugiura, Suematsu, Moritoki, Shibata, Littman, Fischbach, Uwamino, Inoue, Honda, Hattori, Murai, Xavier, Hirose and Honda2021). Interestingly, compared with younger individuals, the GM of the Italian elderly aged over 100 years had more genes for xenobiotic metabolism, particularly for chemicals deriving from the industrial manufacturing of many indoor products, such as synthetic fibres, resins, and synthetic leather (Lynch and Pedersen, Reference Lynch and Pedersen2016). This could reflect an adaptive response to increased exposure to these anthropic pollutants over a lifetime.

Looking specifically at GM characteristics that could be a marker of longevity, Christensenellaceae is worthy of further study as it is more abundant in long-lived people independent of their culture, diet, and lifestyle (Kong et al., Reference Kong, Hua, Zeng, Ning, Li and Zhao2016; Tuikhar et al., Reference Tuikhar, Keisam, Labala, Ramakrishnan, Arunkumar, Ahmed, Biagi and Jeyaram2019). Research in different age groups has revealed that a greater abundance of Christensenellaceae is associated with lower body mass index, visceral adipose tissue and inflammation, more favourable lipid traits (lower total cholesterol, Apo B levels, triglycerides), and higher levels of faecal SCFAs (Waters and Ley, Reference Waters and Ley2019). Hence Christensenellaceae could be a future candidate as probiotic.

Dietary modification could also encourage the acquisition of beneficial species for healthier ageing. In the NU-AGE study, Ghosh et al. (Reference Ghosh, Rampelli, Jeffery, Santoro, Neto, Capri, Giampieri, Jennings, Candela, Turroni, Zoetendal, Hermes, Elodie, Meunier, Brugere, Pujos-Guillot, Berendsen, De Groot, Feskins, Kaluza, Pietruszka, Bielak, Comte, Maijo-Ferre, Nicoletti, De Vos, Fairweather-Tait, Cassidy, Brigidi, Franceschi and O’Toole2020) recruited 1,250 healthy, pre-frail adults aged 65–79 from five European countries and randomised them to a 12-month nutritional intervention consisting of a Med diet with vitamin D supplementation versus a control diet. The GM was analysed in 612 participants before and after the intervention. Adherence to the intervention diet enriched specific GM taxa that were positively associated with cognitive function markers and negatively associated with frailty and inflammatory markers, including C-reactive protein and interleukin-17. The diet-modulated GM changes were also associated with increased SCFAs and lower production of secondary bile acids.

In summary, age group separation of the GM composition is evident, and longevity adaptation seems linked to the enrichment of health-associated GM species, including Akkermansia, Christensenellaceae, Bifidobacterium, and Odoribacteraceae, involved in the establishment of new homeostasis. These bacterial taxa could be promoted using dietary interventions to improve the “health span” of the elderly.

Probiotics and the ageing immune system

The final presentation of the Yakult International Symposium was given by Dr Caroline Childs at the University of Southampton, UK, who examined the role of the GM in immunosenescence.

How does the immune system age?

The thymus is responsible for manufacturing immune cells, such as T-cells, but this ability declines sharply with age after the peak thymus activity in childhood. By age 50, active thymus tissue is significantly replaced with adipose cells, resulting in lower production of naïve immune cells and a higher proportion of memory T-cells with a low functional capacity. The function of immune cells in vitro correlates with clinical outcomes, so it is no surprise that the coronavirus pandemic – representing a novel immune challenge – disproportionately affected older populations. Ageing is characterised by chronic, low-level inflammation (inflammageing) and a greater risk of morbidity and mortality. Older people are more likely to get infections, and their immune system responds less effectively to these and vaccinations, for example, only 30–50 per cent of elderly adults gain protection from influenza vaccinations (Demicheli et al., Reference Demicheli, Jefferson, Di Pietrantonj, Ferroni, Thorning, Thomas and Rivetti2018).

T-cells fall into two categories; cytotoxic T-cells which fight infections, and helper T-cells which act like project managers. However, T-cell ageing is not automatically linked to chronological age. Some 70-year-olds may have the T-cell functionality of 30-year-olds, and vice versa (Kaczorowski et al., Reference Kaczorowski, Shekhar, Nkulikiyimfura, Dekker, Maecker, Davis, Chakraborty and Brodin2017), which correlates with the findings noted by previous speakers describing the overlap in GM composition for different age groups. Building on this point, a study of 178 older adults (Claesson et al., Reference Claesson, Jeffery, Conde, Power, O’Connor, Cusack, Harris, Coakley, Lakshminarayanan, O’Sullivan, Fitzgerald, Deane, O’Connor, Harnedy, O’Connor, O’Mahony, van Sinderen, Wallace, Brennan, Stanton, Marchesi, Fitzgerald, Shanahan, Hill, Ross and O’Toole2012) found that the faecal microbiota composition clustered by diet and with participants residing in care homes or the community. The care home GM was less diverse and correlated significantly with measures of frailty, co-morbidity, and inflammatory markers of inflammation. Interestingly, moving from the community to a care setting changed the diet immediately, but it took around a year for the GM to respond (O’Toole and Jeffery, Reference O’Toole and Jeffery2015).

One key change in the ageing GM is the shift away from Bifidobacterium (Arboleya et al., Reference Arboleya, Watkins, Stanton and Ross2016), a genus associated with immuno-modulatory properties. An in vitro study (You and Yaqoob, Reference You and Yaqoob2012) found that exposure of human mononuclear cells to probiotics from bifidobacteria and lactobacilli strains produced immunomodulatory effects, but the response was also significantly influenced by the age of the volunteer.

How can immune ageing be measured?

Flow cytometry can measure and differentiate immune cells from human samples and determine immune age by looking at the relative proportions of naïve cells and different types of memory cells, that is, central, effector or terminally differentiated effector. Accumulation of T EMRA cells is characteristic of ageing. Other biomarkers of cell ageing include the CD28 marker on T-cells, which helps to stabilise their interaction with B cells, the source of antibody production. CD28 is progressively lost with ageing while, in contrast, the CF57 marker, which is linked to the immune response to viruses and cancer cells, appears on the T-cells and natural killer (NK) cells of older adults. This is thought to indicate cell exhaustion. A study (Tae Yu et al., Reference Tae Yu, Youn, Lee, Park, Chi, Lee, Choi, Park, Choi, Ha and Shin2015) in patients the morning after having a myocardial infarction revealed that the frequency of CD57 in their CD8 T-cell population positively correlated with cardiovascular mortality 6 months later. In other research, CD57 was a marker of a poor NK cell response to influenza vaccination in older subjects which could not be offset by supplementation with a synbiotic containing B. longum (Przemska-Kosicka et al., Reference Przemska-Kosicka, Childs, Maidens, Dong, Todd, Gosney, Tuohy and Yaqoob2018).

Another marker of immune ageing is T-cell receptor excision circles (TRECs). These circles of DNA form when T-cells are created in the thymus and are exported to the cell cytosol. TRECs decline in concentration with each round of cell division as T-cells replicate and mature (Lang et al., Reference Lang, Mitchell, Govind and Aspinall2011). Hence, one may see more TRECs in younger people and those with younger immune systems than in older or immunosenescent people (Mitchell et al., Reference Mitchell, Lang and Aspinall2010). Seropositivity to viruses which disrupt immune function, such as cytomegalovirus or even SARS-Covid-19, is also a helpful marker.

Probiotics are beneficial for immune function as they lower the burden of certain infections and reduce antibiotic use (Hao et al., Reference Hao, Dong and Wu2015), potentially saving health systems millions of Euros (Lenoir-Wijnkoop et al., Reference Lenoir-Wijnkoop, Gerlier, Bresson, Le Pen and Berdeaux2015). However, the data have a high level of heterogeneity, lowering the overall quality of evidence. A review of the impact of probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics on immune response in older adults found evidence of improved vaccine responsiveness, NK cell activity and phagocytosis, and a reduced incidence of infections (Childs and Calder, Reference Childs, Calder, Fulop, Franceschi, Hirokawa and Pawelec2017). However, only two studies used specific markers of immunosenescence, reporting increases in naïve T cells and TRECs after probiotics, and a third of the studies were not RCTs.

A SRMA of six eligible trials (Gui et al., Reference Gui, Wang, Zhao, Huang, Tan, Xiao and Yang2020) found that probiotic use ranging from 3 to 12 weeks significantly increased NK cell activity in healthy older adults but concluded that the overall results were insufficiently convincing given the small sample sizes and very large heterogeneity. A systematic review (Chenhuichen et al., Reference Chenhuichen, Cabello-Olmo, Barajas, Izquierdo, Ramírez-Vélez, Zambom-Ferraresi and Martínez-Velilla2022) of nine RCTs and one secondary analysis assessed a broader range of parameters relating to immunity, metabolic health, GM, and cognitive function, finding overall benefits for probiotics and prebiotics, although the risk of bias in studies was considered high. Further studies should take account of immunological age at baseline to reduce heterogeneity and utilise markers of immune cell ageing and function.

Conclusions

The evidence for the role of the GM in acute and chronic human health is now substantial, with indications that the influence of our microorganisms goes well beyond the gut to include the immune system, metabolism, and brain. While ageing and genetics impact on the composition and diversity of the GM, it is nevertheless clear that modifiable factors, such as diet, antibiotic use, exercise, and exposure to outdoor-type microbes, may be more important for achieving microbiota eubiosis. This provides people with the chance to adopt more gut-friendly lifestyles. Still, it also raises several challenges including gathering the proper evidence to ascertain which microbiota interventions are right for which population groups, understanding the mechanisms involved, developing effective probiotic and prebiotic products, and ensuring that these are appropriately regulated. As outlined in this fascinating symposium and summarised in Figure 1, there is now a tantalising opportunity to find ways to live in harmony with our GM, which could offer widespread human health benefits.

Figure 1 Summary of the overarching themes of the Symposium.

Abbreviations

AMR

antimicrobial resistance

BBB

blood–brain barrier

BDNF

brain-derived neurotrophic factor

CSF

cerebral spinal fluid

EFSA

European Food Safety Authority

FF

fermented foods

FMT

faecal microbiota transplant

GM

gut microbiota

GRAS

generally recognised as safe

HPA

hypothalamus–pituitary–adrenal

IBS

irritable bowel syndrome

ISS

International Space Station

LAB

lactic acid bacteria

LcS

Lacticaseibacillus paracasei strain Shirota

LPS

lipopolysaccharide

MDD

major depressive disorder

Med

Mediterranean

NK

natural killer

OMV

outer membrane vesicles

PD

Parkinson’s disease

QPS

the qualified presumption of safety

RA

risk assessment

RCT

randomised controlled trial

RTI

respiratory tract infection

SCFA

short-chain fatty acid

SRMA

systematic review and meta-analysis

TLR

toll-like receptor

TREC

T-cell receptor excision circles

T1D

type 1 diabetes

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the speakers for reading and approving the summaries of their presentations.

Author contribution

Conceptualization: C.K., P.R., B.P.; Funding acquisition: P.R.; Project administration: C.K., P.R.; Supervision: B.P.; Writing – original draft: C.H.S.R.; Writing – review and editing: C.H.S.R., C.K., B.P.

Disclosure statement

Authors B.P. and C.K. are employees of Yakult Europe BV. while P.R. is an employee of Yakult Italy SrL. Author C.H.S.R. received financial support to draft this report. Speaker, Dr Larsen, is an employee of Yakult Nederland while speaker Dr Matsuda is an employee of the Yakult Central Institute, Yakult Honsha Co., Ltd., Japan.

Funding

The following speakers received an honorarium for their contribution and their travel costs were covered by Yakult Europe BV: Profs. Moissl-Eichinger, Kraneveld, Vandenbroucke, Guarner, Cotter, Morelli, Bischoff, Brummer, Lacroix, Martínez, Brigidi and Dr Childs. Travel costs of Dr Larsen and Dr Matsuda were covered by Yakult Europe BV. Author C.H.S.R. received financial support (to cover travel and time) from Yakult Europe to attend the symposium and to draft this report.

Ethics statement

This manuscript is our own original work and does not duplicate any previously published work. This manuscript has been submitted only to this journal – it is not under consideration, accepted for publication or in press elsewhere. All listed authors know of and agree to the manuscript being submitted to the journal. This manuscript contains nothing that is abusive, defamatory, fraudulent, illegal, libellous or obscene.

References

Aizawa, E, Tsuji, H, Asahara, T, Takahashi, T, Teraishi, T, Yoshida, S, Ota, M, Koga, N, Hattori, K and Kunugi, H (2016) Possible association of Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus in the gut microbiota of patients with major depressive disorder. Journal of Affective Disorders 202, 254257.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Akkasheh, G, Kashani-Poor, Z, Tajabadi-Ebrahimi, M, Jafari, P, Akbari, H, Taghizadeh, M, Memarzadeh, MR, Asemi, Z and Esmaillzadeh, A (2016) Clinical and metabolic response to probiotic administration in patients with major depressive disorder: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Nutrition 32(3), 315320.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ali, A, Kamal, MM, Rahman, MH, Siddiqui, MN, Haque, MA, Saha, KK and Rahman, MA (2022) Functional dairy products as a source of bioactive peptides and probiotics: Current trends and future prospectives. Journal of Food Science & Technology 59(4), 12631279.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Arboleya, S, Watkins, C, Stanton, C and Ross, RP (2016) Gut Bifidobacteria populations in human health and aging. Frontiers in Microbiology 7, 1204.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Arumugam, M, Raes, J, Pelletier, E, Le Paslier, D, Yamada, T, Mende, DR, Fernandes, GR, Tap, J, Bruls, T, Batto, JM, Bertalan, M, Borruel, N, Casellas, F, Fernandez, L, Gautier, L, Hansen, T, Hattori, M, Hayashi, T, Kleerebezem, M, Kurokawa, K, Leclerc, M, Levenez, F, Manichanh, C, Nielsen, HB, Nielsen, T, Pons, N, Poulain, J, Qin, J, Sicheritz-Ponten, T, Tims, S, Torrents, D, Ugarte, E, Zoetendal, EG, Wang, J, Guarner, F, Pedersen, O, de Vos, WM, Brunak, S, Doré, J, MetaHIT Consortium, Antolín, M, Artiguenave, F, Blottiere, HM, Almeida, M, Brechot, C, Cara, C, Chervaux, C, Cultrone, A, Delorme, C, Denariaz, G, Dervyn, R, Foerstner, KU, Friss, C, van de Guchte, M, Guedon, E, Haimet, F, Huber, W, van Hylckama-Vlieg, J, Jamet, A, Juste, C, Kaci, G, Knol, J, Lakhdari, O, Layec, S, Le Roux, K, Maguin, E, Mérieux, A, Melo Minardi, R, M’rini, C, Muller, J, Oozeer, R, Parkhill, J, Renault, P, Rescigno, M, Sanchez, N, Sunagawa, S, Torrejon, A, Turner, K, Vandemeulebrouck, G, Varela, E, Winogradsky, Y, Zeller, G, Weissenbach, J, Ehrlich, SD and Bork, P (2011) Enterotypes of the human gut microbiome. Nature 473(7346), 174180.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bach, JF (2002) The effect of infections on susceptibility to autoimmune and allergic diseases. New England Journal of Medicine 19(12), 911920.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bäckhed, F, Roswall, J, Peng, Y, Feng, Q, Jia, H, Kovatcheva-Datchary, P, Li, Y, Xia, Y, Xie, H, Zhong, H, Khan, MT, Zhang, J, Li, J, Xiao, L, Al-Aama, J, Zhang, D, Lee, YS, Kotowska, D, Colding, C, Tremaroli, V, Yin, Y, Bergman, S, Xu, X, Madsen, L, Kristiansen, K, Dahlgren, J and Wang, J (2015) Dynamics and stabilization of the human gut microbiome during the first year of life. Cell Host & Microbe 17(5), 690703.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Balusu, S, Brkic, M, Libert, C and Vandenbroucke, RE (2016a) The choroid plexus-cerebrospinal fluid interface in Alzheimer’s disease: More than just a barrier. Neural Regeneration Research 11(4), 534537.Google ScholarPubMed
Balusu, S, Van Wonterghem, E, De Rycke, R, Raemdonck, K, Stremersch, S, Gevaert, K, Brkic, M, Demeestere, D, Vanhooren, V, Hendrix, A, Libert, C and Vandenbroucke, RE (2016b) Identification of a novel mechanism of blood-brain communication during peripheral inflammation via choroid plexus-derived extracellular vesicles. EMBO Molecular Medicine 4(10), 11621183.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Banerjee, S, Schlaeppi, K and van der Heijden, MGA (2018) Keystone taxa as drivers of microbiome structure and functioning. Nature Reviews Microbiology 16, 567576.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Barba, E, Sánchez, B, Burri, E, Accarino, A, Monclus, E, Navazo, I, Guarner, F, Margolles, A and Azpiroz, F (2019) Abdominal distension after eating lettuce: The role of intestinal gas evaluated in vitro and by abdominal CT imaging. Neurogastroenterology & Motility 31(12), e13703.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bellassi, P, Rocchetti, G, Nocetti, M, Lucini, L, Masoero, F and Morelli, L (2021) A combined metabolomic and metagenomic approach to discriminate raw milk for the production of hard cheese. Food 6(1), 109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Belloso Daza, MV, Cortimiglia, C, Bassi, D and Cocconcelli, PS (2021) Genome-based studies indicate that the Enterococcus faecium Clade B strains belong to Enterococcus lactis species and lack of the hospital infection associated markers. International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 71. http://doi.org/10.1099/ijsem.0.004948CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Belloso Daza, MV, Milani, G, Cortimiglia, C, Pietta, E, Bassi, D and Cocconcelli, PS (2022) Genomic insights of Enterococcus faecium UC7251, a multi-drug resistant strain from ready-to-eat food, highlight the risk of antimicrobial resistance in the food chain. Frontiers in Microbiology 13, 894241.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Beltrán-Barrientos, LM, Hernández-Mendoza, A, Torres-Llanez, MJ, González-Córdova, AF and Vallejo-Córdoba, B (2016) Invited review: Fermented milk as antihypertensive functional food. Journal of Dairy Science 99(6), 40994110.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Biagi, E, Franceschi, C, Rampelli, S, Severgnini, M, Ostan, R, Turroni, S, Consolandi, C, Quercia, S, Scurti, M, Monti, D, Capri, M, Brigidi, P and Candela, M (2016) Gut microbiota and extreme longevity. Current Biology 6(11), 14801485.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bian, G, Gloor, GB, Gong, A, Jia, C, Zhang, W, Hu, J, Zhang, H, Zhang, Y, Zhou, Z, Zhang, J, Burton, JP, Reid, G, Xiao, Y, Zeng, Q, Yang, K and Li, J (2017) The gut microbiota of healthy aged Chinese is similar to that of the healthy young. mSphere 27(5), e00327-17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Black, CJ, Thakur, ER, Houghton, LA, Quigley, EMM, Moayyedi, P and Ford, AC (2020) Efficacy of psychological therapies for irritable bowel syndrome: Systematic review and network meta-analysis. Gut 69(8), 14411451.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Blaser, MJ and Falkow, S (2009) What are the consequences of the disappearing human microbiota? Nature Reviews Microbiology 7, 887894.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bo, L, Li, J, Tao, T, Bai, Y, Ye, X, Hotchkiss, RS, Kollef, MH, Crooks, NH and Deng, X (2014) Probiotics for preventing ventilator-associated pneumonia. Cochrane Database Systematic Reviews 10(10), CD009066.Google ScholarPubMed
Bourdichon, F, Arias, E, Babuchowski, A, Bückle, A, Bello, FD, Dubois, A, Fontana, A, Fritz, D, Kemperman, R, Laulund, S, McAuliffe, O, Miks, MH, Papademas, P, Patrone, V, Sharma, DK, Sliwinski, E, Stanton, C, Von Ah, U, Yao, S and Morelli, L (2021) The forgotten role of food cultures. FEMS Microbiology Letters 368(14), fnab085.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bourrie, BCT, Ju, T, Fouhse, JM, Forgie, AJ, Sergi, C, Cotter, PD and Willing, BP (2021) Kefir microbial composition is a deciding factor in the physiological impact of kefir in a mouse model of obesity. British Journal of Nutrition 125(2), 129138.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourrie, BCT, Richard, C and Willing, BP (2020) Kefir in the prevention and treatment of obesity and metabolic disorders. Current Nutrition Reports 9(3), 184192.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bourrie, BC, Willing, BP and Cotter, PD (2016) The microbiota and health promoting characteristics of the fermented beverage kefir. Frontiers in Microbiology 7, 647.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Braniste, V, Al-Asmakh, M, Kowal, C, Anuar, F, Abbaspour, A, Tóth, M, Korecka, A, Bakocevic, N, Ng, LG, Kundu, P, Gulyás, B, Halldin, C, Hultenby, K, Nilsson, H, Hebert, H, Volpe, BT, Diamond, B and Pettersson, S (2014) The gut microbiota influences blood-brain barrier permeability in mice. Science Translational Medicine 6(263), 263ra158.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Candore, G, Balistreri, CR, Colonna-Romano, G, Grimaldi, MP, Lio, D, Listi’, F, Scola, L, Vasto, S and Caruso, C (2008) Immunosenescence and anti-immunosenescence therapies: The case of probiotics. Rejuvenation Research 11(2), 425432.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cernada, M, Bäuerl, C, Serna, E, Collado, MC, Martínez, GP and Vento, M (2016) Sepsis in preterm infants causes alterations in mucosal gene expression and microbiota profiles compared to non-septic twins. Scientific Reports 6(6), 25497.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chapman, MR, Robinson, LS, Pinkner, JS, Roth, R, Heuser, J, Hammar, M, Normark, S and Hultgren, SJ (2002) Role of Escherichia coli curli operons in directing amyloid fiber formation. Science 295(5556), 851855.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chassard, C, de Wouters, T and Lacroix, C (2014) Probiotics tailored to the infant: A window of opportunity. Current Opinion in Biotechnology 26, 141147.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chenhuichen, C, Cabello-Olmo, M, Barajas, M, Izquierdo, M, Ramírez-Vélez, R, Zambom-Ferraresi, F and Martínez-Velilla, N (2022) Impact of probiotics and prebiotics in the modulation of the major events of the aging process: A systematic review of randomized controlled trials. Experimental Gerontology 164, 111809.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Childs, CE and Calder, PC (2017) Modifying the gut microbiome through diet: Effects on the immune system of elderly subjects. In Fulop, T, Franceschi, C, Hirokawa, K and Pawelec, G (eds), Handbook of Immunosenescence. Cham: Springer.Google Scholar
Chng, KR, Ghosh, TS, Tan, YH, Nandi, T, Lee, IR, Ng, AHQ, Li, C, Ravikrishnan, A, Lim, KM, Lye, D, Barkham, T, Raman, K, Chen, SL, Chai, L, Young, B, Gan, YH and Nagarajan, N (2020) Metagenome-wide association analysis identifies microbial determinants of post-antibiotic ecological recovery in the gut. Nature Ecology & Evolution 4(9), 12561267.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Claesson, MJ, Jeffery, IB, Conde, S, Power, SE, O’Connor, EM, Cusack, S, Harris, HM, Coakley, M, Lakshminarayanan, B, O’Sullivan, O, Fitzgerald, GF, Deane, J, O’Connor, M, Harnedy, N, O’Connor, K, O’Mahony, D, van Sinderen, D, Wallace, M, Brennan, L, Stanton, C, Marchesi, JR, Fitzgerald, AP, Shanahan, F, Hill, C, Ross, RP and O’Toole, PW (2012) Gut microbiota composition correlates with diet and health in the elderly. Nature 488(7410), 178184.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Clemente, JC, Pehrsson, EC, Blaser, MJ, Sandhu, K, Gao, Z, Wang, B, Magris, M, Hidalgo, G, Contreras, M, Noya-Alarcón, Ó, Lander, O, McDonald, J, Cox, M, Walter, J, Oh, PL, Ruiz, JF, Rodriguez, S, Shen, N, Song, SJ, Metcalf, J, Knight, R, Dantas, G and Dominguez-Bello, MG (2015) The microbiome of uncontacted Amerindians. Science Advances 1(3), e1500183.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Conteville, LC, Oliveira-Ferreira, J and Vicente, ACP (2019) Gut microbiome biomarkers and functional diversity within an Amazonian semi-nomadic hunter-gatherer group. Frontiers in Microbiology 10, 1743.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Daliri, EB, Ofosu, FK, Xiuqin, C, Chelliah, R and Oh, DH (2021) Probiotic effector compounds: Current knowledge and future perspectives. Frontiers in Microbiology 12, 655705.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
David, LA, Maurice, CF, Carmody, RN, Gootenberg, DB, Button, JE, Wolfe, BE, Ling, AV, Devlin, AS, Varma, Y, Fischbach, MA, Biddinger, SB, Dutton, RJ and Turnbaugh, PJ (2014) Diet rapidly and reproducibly alters the human gut microbiome. Nature 505, 559563.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
De Filippis, F, Pellegrini, N, Vannini, L, Jeffery, IB, La Storia, A, Laghi, L, Serrazanetti, DI, Di Cagno, R, Ferrocino, I, Lazzi, C, Turroni, S, Cocolin, L, Brigidi, P, Neviani, E, Gobbetti, M, O’Toole, PW and Ercolini, D (2016) High-level adherence to a Mediterranean diet beneficially impacts the gut microbiota and associated metabolome. Gut 65(11), 18121821.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Demicheli, V, Jefferson, T, Di Pietrantonj, C, Ferroni, E, Thorning, S, Thomas, RE and Rivetti, A (2018) Vaccines for preventing influenza in the elderly. Cochrane Database Systematic Reviews 2(2), D004876.Google ScholarPubMed
Dhar, D and Mohanty, A (2020) Gut microbiota and COVID-19-possible link and implications. Virus Research 285, 198018.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Duong, QA, Pittet, LF, Curtis, N and Zimmerman, P (2022) Antibiotic exposure and adverse long-term health outcomes in children: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of Infection 85(3), 213300.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) (2021) EFSA statement on the requirements for whole genome sequence analysis of microorganisms intentionally used in the food chain. EFSA Journal 19(7), 6506.Google Scholar
Fan, Y and Pedersen, O (2021) Gut microbiota in human metabolic health and disease. Nature Reviews Microbiology 19, 5571.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Franz, C, Huch, M, Abriouel, H and Gálvez, A (2011) Enterococcus and safety. In Semedo-Lemsaddek, T, Barreto-Crespo, MT and Nova, TR (eds), Qualified Presumption of Safety (QPS) and Generally Recognised as Safe (GRAS) Concepts. Amsterdam: Elsevier, pp. 431447.Google Scholar
Gacesa, R, Kurilshikov, A, Vich Vila, A, Sinha, T, Klaassen, MAY, Bolte, LA, Andreu-Sánchez, S, Chen, L, Collij, V, Hu, S, Dekens, JAM, Lenters, VC, Björk, JR, Swarte, JC, Swertz, MA, Jansen, BH, Gelderloos-Arends, J, Jankipersadsing, S, Hofker, M, Vermeulen, RCH, Sanna, S, Harmsen, HJM, Wijmenga, C, Fu, J, Zhernakova, A and Weersma, RK (2022) Environmental factors shaping the gut microbiome in a Dutch population. Nature 604(7907), 732739.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galkin, F, Mamoshina, P, Aliper, A, Putin, E, Moskalev, V, Gladyshev, VN and Zhavoronkov, A (2020) Human gut microbiome aging clock based on taxonomic profiling and deep learning. iScience 23(6), 101199.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gänzle, M (2022) The periodic table of fermented foods: Limitations and opportunities. Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology 106(8), 28152826.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Garaiova, I, Paduchová, Z, Nagyová, Z, Wang, D, Michael, DR, Plummer, SF, Marchesi, JR, Ďuračková, Z and Muchová, J (2021) Probiotics with vitamin C for the prevention of upper respiratory tract symptoms in children aged 3-10 years: Randomised controlled trial. Beneficial Microbes 12(5), 431440.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Garrett-Bakelman, FE, Darshi, M, Green, SJ, Gur, RC, Lin, L, Macias, BR, McKenna, MJ, Meydan, C, Mishra, T, Nasrini, J, Piening, BD, Rizzardi, LF, Sharma, K, Siamwala, JH, Taylor, L, Vitaterna, MH, Afkarian, M, Afshinnekoo, E, Ahadi, S, Ambati, A, Arya, M, Bezdan, D, Callahan, CM, Chen, S, Choi, AMK, Chlipala, GE, Contrepois, K, Covington, M, Crucian, BE, De Vivo, I, Dinges, DF, Ebert, DJ, Feinberg, JI, Gandara, JA, George, KA, Goutsias, J, Grills, GS, Hargens, AR, Heer, M, Hillary, RP, Hoofnagle, AN, VYH, Hook, Jenkinson, G, Jiang, P, Keshavarzian, A, Laurie, SS, Lee-McMullen, B, Lumpkins, SB, MacKay, M, Maienschein-Cline, MG, Melnick, AM, Moore, TM, Nakahira, K, Patel, HH, Pietrzyk, R, Rao, V, Saito, R, Salins, DN, Schilling, JM, Sears, DD, Sheridan, CK, Stenger, MB, Tryggvadottir, R, Urban, AE, Vaisar, T, Van Espen, B, Zhang, J, Ziegler, MG, Zwart, SR, Charles, JB, Kundrot, CE, Scott, GBI, Bailey, SM, Basner, M, Feinberg, AP, Lee, SMC, Mason, CE, Mignot, E, Rana, BK, Smith, SM, Snyder, MP and Turek, FW (2019) The NASA twins study: A multidimensional analysis of a year-long human spaceflight. Science 364(6436), eaau8650.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ghosh, TS, Rampelli, S, Jeffery, IB, Santoro, A, Neto, M, Capri, M, Giampieri, E, Jennings, A, Candela, M, Turroni, S, Zoetendal, EG, Hermes, GDA, Elodie, C, Meunier, N, Brugere, CM, Pujos-Guillot, E, Berendsen, AM, De Groot, LCPGM, Feskins, EJM, Kaluza, J, Pietruszka, B, Bielak, MJ, Comte, B, Maijo-Ferre, M, Nicoletti, C, De Vos, WM, Fairweather-Tait, S, Cassidy, A, Brigidi, P, Franceschi, C and O’Toole, PW (2020) Mediterranean diet intervention alters the gut microbiome in older people reducing frailty and improving health status: The NU-AGE 1-year dietary intervention across five European countries. Gut 69(7), 12181228.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Goodrich, JK, Davenport, ER, Beaumont, M, Jackson, MA, Knight, R, Ober, C, Spector, TD, Bell, JT, Clark, AG and Ley, RE (2016) Genetic determinants of the gut microbiome in UK twins. Cell Host & Microbe 19(5), 731743.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gui, Q, Wang, A, Zhao, X, Huang, S, Tan, Z, Xiao, B and Yang, Y (2020) Effects of probiotic supplementation on natural killer cell function in healthy elderly individuals: A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition 74(12), 16301637.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gutiérrez-Castrellón, P, Gandara-Martí, T, Abreu, Y, Abreu, AT, Nieto-Rufino, CD, López-Orduña, E, Jiménez-Escobar, I, Jiménez-Gutiérrez, C, López-Velazquez, G and Espadaler-Mazo, J (2022) Probiotic improves symptomatic and viral clearance in Covid19 outpatients: A randomized, quadruple-blinded, placebo-controlled trial. Gut Microbes 14(1), 2018899.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Halmos, EP, Christophersen, CT, Bird, AR, Shepherd, SJ, Gibson, PR and Muir, JG (2015) Diets that differ in their FODMAP content alter the colonic luminal microenvironment. Gut 64(1), 93100.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hao, Q, Dong, BR and Wu, T (2015) Probiotics for preventing acute upper respiratory tract infections. Cochrane Database Systematic Reviews 2, CD006895.Google Scholar
Hao, Q, Lu, Z, Dong, BR, Huang, CQ and Wu, T (2011) Probiotics for preventing acute upper respiratory tract infections. Cochrane Database Systematic Reviews 9, CD006895.Google Scholar
He, FJ, Li, J and Macgregor, GA (2013) Effect of longer-term modest salt reduction on blood pressure: Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised trials. British Medical Journal 346, f1325.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hong, CT, Chen, JH and Huang, TW (2022) Probiotics treatment for Parkinson disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis of clinical trials. Aging (Albany NY) 14(17), 70147025.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Horsager, J, Andersen, KB, Knudsen, K, Skjærbæk, C, Fedorova, TD, Okkels, N, Schaeffer, E, Bonkat, SK, Geday, J, Otto, M, Sommerauer, M, Danielsen, EH, Bech, E, Kraft, J, Munk, OL, Hansen, SD, Pavese, N, Göder, R, Brooks, DJ, Berg, D and Borghammer, P (2020) Brain-first versus body-first Parkinson’s disease: A multimodal imaging case-control study. Brain 143(10), 30773088.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Huaman, JW, Mego, M, Manichanh, C, Cañellas, N, Cañueto, D, Segurola, H, Jansana, M, Malagelada, C, Accarino, A, Vulevic, J, Tzortzis, G, Gibson, G, Saperas, E, Guarner, F and Azpiroz, F (2018) Effects of prebiotics vs a diet low in FODMAPs in patients with functional gut disorders. Gastroenterology 155(4), 10041007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huang, HL, Chen, HT, Luo, QL, Xu, HM, He, J, Li, YQ, Zhou, YL, Yao, F, Nie, YQ and Zhou, YJ (2019) Relief of irritable bowel syndrome by fecal microbiota transplantation is associated with changes in diversity and composition of the gut microbiota. Journal of Digestive Disorders 20(8), 401408.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ji, T, Zhu, X, Shang, F and Zhang, X (2021) Preventive effect of probiotics on ventilator-associated pneumonia: A meta-analysis of 2428 patients. Annals of Pharmacotherapy 55(8), 949962.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jimenez, ME, O’Donovan, CM, de Ullivarri, MF and Cotter, PD (2022) Microorganisms present in artisanal fermented food from South America. Frontiers in Microbiology 13, 941866.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Johnstone, J, Meade, M, Lauzier, F, Marshall, J, Duan, E, Dionne, J, Arabi, YM, Heels-Ansdell, D, Thabane, L, Lamarche, D, Surette, M, Zytaruk, N, Mehta, S, Dodek, P, McIntyre, L, English, S, Rochwerg, B, Karachi, T, Henderson, W, Wood, G, Ovakim, D, Herridge, M, Granton, J, Wilcox, ME, Goffi, A, Stelfox, HT, Niven, D, Muscedere, J, Lamontagne, F, D’Aragon, F, St-Arnaud, C, Ball, I, Nagpal, D, Girard, M, Aslanian, P, Charbonney, E, Williamson, D, Sligl, W, Friedrich, J, Adhikari, NK, Marquis, F, Archambault, P, Khwaja, K, Kristof, A, Kutsogiannis, J, Zarychanski, R, Paunovic, B, Reeve, B, Lellouche, F, Hosek, P, Tsang, J, Binnie, A, Trop, S, Loubani, O, Hall, R, Cirone, R, Reynolds, S, Lysecki, P, Golan, E, Cartin-Ceba, R, Taylor, R and Cook, D (2021) Prevention of severe pneumonia and endotracheal colonization trial (PROSPECT) investigators and the Canadian critical care trials group. Effect of probiotics on incident ventilator-associated pneumonia in critically ill patients: A randomized clinical trial. Journal of the American Medical Association 326(11), 10241033.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jost, T, Lacroix, C, Braegger, C and Chassard, C (2012) New insights in gut microbiota establishment in healthy breast-fed neonates. PLoS One 7(8), e44595.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jost, T, Lacroix, C, Braegger, C and Chassard, C (2013) Assessment of bacterial diversity in breast milk using culture-dependent and culture-independent approaches. British Journal of Nutrition 110(7), 12531262.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kaczorowski, KJ, Shekhar, K, Nkulikiyimfura, D, Dekker, CL, Maecker, H, Davis, MM, Chakraborty, AK and Brodin, P (2017) Continuous immunotypes describe human immune variation and predict diverse responses. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science 114(30), E6097E6106.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kaur, L, Gordon, M, Baines, PA, Iheozor-Ejiofor, Z, Sinopoulou, V and Akobeng, AK (2020) Probiotics for induction of remission in ulcerative colitis. Cochrane Database Systematic Reviews 3(3), CD005573.Google ScholarPubMed
Kazemi, A, Noorbala, AA, Azam, K, Eskandari, MH and Djafarian, K (2019) Effect of probiotic and prebiotic vs placebo on psychological outcomes in patients with major depressive disorder: A randomized clinical trial. Clinical Nutrition 38(2), 522528.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Khan, S, Hansen, R, Scott, K, Martin, J, Berry, S, Stevenson, M, Okapapi, A, Hold, G and Munro, M (2015) The human gut is probably sterile at birth. Archives of Disease in Childhood 100, A50A51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, BS, Choi, CW, Shin, H, Jin, SP, Bae, JS, Han, M, Seo, EY, Chun, J and Chung, JH (2019) Comparison of the gut microbiota of centenarians in longevity villages of South Korea with those of other age groups. Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology 29(3), 429440.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kim, S, Kwon, SH, Kam, TI, Panicker, N, Karuppagounder, SS, Lee, S, Lee, JH, Kim, WR, Kook, M, Foss, CA, Shen, C, Lee, H, Kulkarni, S, Pasricha, PJ, Lee, G, Pomper, MG, Dawson, VL, Dawson, TM and Ko, HS (2019) Transneuronal propagation of pathologic α-Synuclein from the gut to the brain models Parkinson’s disease. Neuron 103(4), 627641.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirjavainen, PV, Karvonen, AM, Adams, RI, Täubel, M, Roponen, M, Tuoresmäki, P, Loss, G, Jayaprakash, B, Depner, M, Ege, MJ, Renz, H, Pfefferle, PI, Schaub, B, Lauener, R, Hyvärinen, A, Knight, R, Heederik, DJJ, von Mutius, E and Pekkanen, J (2019) Farm-like indoor microbiota in non-farm homes protects children from asthma development. Nature Medicine 25(7), 10891095.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Knudsen, JK, Bundgaard-Nielsen, C, Hjerrild, S, Nielsen, RE, Leutscher, P and Sørensen, S (2021) Gut microbiota variations in patients diagnosed with major depressive disorder-a systematic review. Brain and Behavior 11(7), e02177.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kong, F, Hua, Y, Zeng, B, Ning, R, Li, Y and Zhao, J (2016) Gut microbiota signatures of longevity. Current Biology 26(18), R832R833.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kostic, AD, Gevers, D, Siljander, H, Vatanen, T, Hyötyläinen, T, Hämäläinen, AM, Peet, A, Tillmann, V, Pöhö, P, Mattila, I, Lähdesmäki, H, Franzosa, EA, Vaarala, O, de Goffau, M, Harmsen, H, Ilonen, J, Virtanen, SM, Clish, CB, Orešič, M, Huttenhower, C, Knip, M, DIABIMMUNE Study Group and Xavier, RJ (2015) The dynamics of the human infant gut microbiome in development and in progression toward type 1 diabetes. Cell Host & Microbe 17(2), 260273.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kuehnast, T, Abbott, C, Pausan, MR, Pearce, DA, Moissl-Eichinger, C and Mahnert, A (2022) The crewed journey to Mars and its implications for the human microbiome. Microbiome 10(1), 26.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lacy, BE and Patel, NK (2017) Rome criteria and a diagnostic approach to irritable bowel syndrome. Journal of Clinical Medicine 6(11), 99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lang, PO, Mitchell, WA, Govind, S and Aspinall, R (2011) Real time-PCR assay estimating the naive T-cell pool in whole blood and dried blood spot samples: Pilot study in young adults. Journal of Immunological Methods 369(1–2), 133140.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Langkamp-Henken, B, Rowe, CC, Ford, AL, Christman, MC, Nieves, C Jr, Khouri, L, Specht, GJ, Girard, SA, Spaiser, SJ and Dahl, WJ (2015) Bifidobacterium bifidum R0071 results in a greater proportion of healthy days and a lower percentage of academically stressed students reporting a day of cold/flu: A randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. British Journal of Nutrition 113(3), 426434.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Larsen, OFA, Claassen, E and Brummer, RJ (2020) On the importance of intraindividual variation in nutritional research. Beneficial Microbes 11(6), 511517.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Larsen, OFA and van de Burgwal, LHM (2021) On the verge of a catastrophic collapse? The need for a multi-ecosystem approach to microbiome studies. Frontiers in Microbiology 12, 784797.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Larsen, OFA, van der Grint, M, Wiegers, C and van de Burgwal, LHM (2022) The gut microbiota: Master of puppets connecting the epidemiology of infectious, autoimmune, and metabolic disease. Frontiers in Microbiology 13, 902106.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Layer, P, Andresen, V, Allescher, H, Bischoff, SC, Claßen, M, Elsenbruch, S, Freitag, M, Frieling, T, Gebhard, M, Goebel-Stengel, M, Häuser, W, Holtmann, G, Keller, J, Kreis, ME, Kruis, W, Langhorst, J, Jansen, PL, Madisch, A, Mönnikes, H, Müller-Lissner, S, Niesler, B, Pehl, C, Pohl, D, Raithel, M, Röhrig-Herzog, G, Schemann, M, Schmiedel, S, Schwille-Kiuntke, J, Storr, M, Preiß, JC, Andus, T, Buderus, S, Ehlert, U, Engel, M, Enninger, A, Fischbach, W, Gillessen, A, Gschossmann, J, Gundling, F, Haag, S, Helwig, U, Hollerbach, S, Karaus, M, Katschinski, M, Krammer, H, Kuhlbusch-Zicklam, R, Matthes, H, Menge, D, Miehlke, S, Posovszky, MC, Schaefert, R, Schmidt-Choudhury, A, Schwandner, O, Schweinlin, A, Seidl, H, Stengel, A, Tesarz, J, van der Voort, I, Voderholzer, W, von Boyen, G, von Schönfeld, J and Wedel, T (2021) Update S3-Leitlinie Reizdarmsyndrom: Definition, Pathophysiologie, Diagnostik und Therapie. Gemeinsame Leitlinie der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Gastroenterologie, Verdauungs- und Stoffwechselkrankheiten (DGVS) und der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Neurogastroenterologie und Motilität (DGNM) AWMF-Registriernummer: 021/016. Zeitschrift für Gastroenterologie 59(12), 13231415.Google Scholar
le Roux, CW (2021) COVID-19 alters thinking and management in metabolic diseases. Nature Reviews Endocrinology 17, 7172.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Leech, J, Cabrera-Rubio, R, Walsh, AM, Macori, G, Walsh, CJ, Barton, W, Finnegan, L, Crispie, F, ’Sullivan O, O, Claesson, MJ and Cotter, PD (2020) Fermented-food metagenomics reveals substrate-associated differences in taxonomy and health-associated and antibiotic resistance determinants. mSystems 5(6), e00522-20.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lei, WT, Shih, PC, Liu, SJ, Lin, CY and Yeh, TL (2017) Effect of probiotics and prebiotics on immune response to influenza vaccination in adults: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Nutrients 9(11), 1175.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lenoir-Wijnkoop, I, Gerlier, L, Bresson, JL, Le Pen, C and Berdeaux, G (2015) Public health and budget impact of probiotics on common respiratory tract infections: A modelling study. PLoS One 10(4), e0122765.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Leta, V, Ray Chaudhuri, K, Milner, O, Chung-Faye, G, Metta, V, Pariante, CM and Borsini, A (2021) Neurogenic and anti-inflammatory effects of probiotics in Parkinson’s disease: A systematic review of preclinical and clinical evidence. Brain, Behavior, and Immunity 98, 5973.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Li, Z, Liang, H, Hu, Y, Lu, L, Zheng, C, Fan, Y, Wu, B, Zou, T, Luo, X, Zhang, X, Zeng, Y, Liu, Z, Zhou, Z, Yue, Z, Ren, Y, Li, Z, Su, Q and Xu, P (2023) Gut bacterial profiles in Parkinson’s disease: A systematic review. CNS Neuroscience & Therapeutics 29(1), 140157.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Liu, RT, Walsh, RFL and Sheehan, AE (2019) Prebiotics and probiotics for depression and anxiety: A systematic review and meta-analysis of controlled clinical trials. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews 102, 1323.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lynch, SV and Pedersen, O (2016) The human intestinal microbiome in health and disease. New England Journal of Medicine 375(24), 23692379.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mackowiak, PA (2013) Recycling Metchnikoff: Probiotics, the intestinal microbiome and the quest for long life. Frontiers in Public Health 1, 52.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mahnert, A, Verseux, C, Schwendner, P, Koskinen, K, Kumpitsch, C, Blohs, M, Wink, L, Brunner, D, Goessler, T, Billi, D and Moissl-Eichinger, C (2021) Microbiome dynamics during the HI-SEAS IV mission, and implications for future crewed missions beyond earth. Microbiome 9, 27.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mai, TT, Thi Thu, P, Thi Hang, H, Trang, TTT, Yui, S, Shigehisa, A, Tien, VT, Dung, TV, Nga, PB, Hung, NT and Tuyen, LD (2021) Efficacy of probiotics on digestive disorders and acute respiratory infections: A controlled clinical trial in young Vietnamese children. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition 75(3), 513520.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Manichanh, C, Eck, A, Varela, E, Roca, J, Clemente, JC, González, A, Knights, D, Knight, R, Estrella, S, Hernandez, C, Guyonnet, D, Accarino, A, Santos, J, Malagelada, JR, Guarner, F and Azpiroz, F (2014) Anal gas evacuation and colonic microbiota in patients with flatulence: Effect of diet. Gut 63(3), 401408.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Marco, ML, Sanders, ME, Gänzle, M, Arrieta, MC, Cotter, PD, De Vuyst, L, Hill, C, Holzapfel, W, Lebeer, S, Merenstein, D, Reid, G, Wolfe, BE and Hutkins, R (2021) The international scientific Association for Probiotics and Prebiotics (ISAPP) consensus statement on fermented foods. Nature Reviews Gastroenterology & Hepatology 18(3), 196208.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Marques, TM, Wall, R, Ross, RP, Fitzgerald, GF, Ryan, CA and Stanton, C (2010) Programming infant gut microbiota: Influence of dietary and environmental factors. Current Opinion in Biotechnology 21(2), 4956.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Matheoud, D, Cannon, T, Voisin, A, Penttinen, AM, Ramet, L, Fahmy, AM, Ducrot, C, Laplante, A, Bourque, MJ, Zhu, L, Cayrol, R, Le Campion, A, McBride, HM, Gruenheid, S, Trudeau, LE and Desjardins, M (2019) Intestinal infection triggers Parkinson’s disease-like symptoms in Pink1−/− mice. Nature 571(7766), 565569.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Maurice, CF and Turnbaugh, PJ (2018) Quantifying the metabolic activities of human-associated microbial communities across multiple ecological scales. FEMS Microbiology Reviews 37, 830848.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McFarland, LV (2021) Efficacy of single-strain probiotics versus multi-strain mixtures: Systematic review of strain and disease specificity. Digestive Diseases and Sciences 66(3), 694704.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mitchell, WA, Lang, PO and Aspinall, R (2010) Tracing thymic output in older individuals. Clinical and Experimental Immunology 161(3), 497503.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mizui, T, Hattori, K, Ishiwata, S, Hidese, S, Yoshida, S, Kunugi, H and Kojima, M (2019) Cerebrospinal fluid BDNF pro-peptide levels in major depressive disorder and schizophrenia. Journal of Psychiatry Research 113, 190198.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mora, M, Wink, L, Kögler, I, Mahnert, A, Rettberg, P, Schwendner, P, Demets, R, Cockell, C, Alekhova, T, Klingl, A, Krause, R, Zolotariof, A, Alexandrova, A and Moissl-Eichinger, C (2019) Space Station conditions are selective but do not alter microbial characteristics relevant to human health. Nature Communications 10(1), 3990.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mukherjee, A, Gómez-Sala, B, O’Connor, EM, Kenny, JG and Cotter, PD (2022) Global regulatory frameworks for fermented foods: A review. Frontiers in Nutrition 9, 902642.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Odamaki, T, Kato, K, Sugahara, H, Hashikura, N, Takahashi, S, Xiao, JZ, Abe, F and Osawa, R (2016) Age-related changes in gut microbiota composition from newborn to centenarian: A cross-sectional study. BMC Microbiology 16, 90.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Oren, A and Garrity, GM (2021) Valid publication of the names of forty-two phyla of prokaryotes. International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 71(10), 005056.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Otaka, M, Kikuchi-Hayakawa, H, Ogura, J, Ishikawa, H, Yomogida, Y, Ota, M, Hidese, S, Ishida, I, Aida, M, Matsuda, K, Kawai, M, Yoshida, S and Kunugi, H (2021) Effect of Lacticaseibacillus paracasei strain Shirota on improvement in depressive symptoms, and its association with abundance of actinobacteria in gut microbiota. Microorganisms 9(5), 1026.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
O’Toole, PW and Jeffery, IB (2015) Gut microbiota and aging. Science 350(6265), 12141215.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pasolli, E, De Filippis, F, Mauriello, IE, Cumbo, F, Walsh, AM, Leech, J, Cotter, PD, Segata, N and Ercolini, D (2020) Large-scale genome-wide analysis links lactic acid bacteria from food with the gut microbiome. Nature Communications 11(1), 2610.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Paz, MA, de-La-Sierra, A, Sáez, M, Barceló, MA, Rodríguez, JJ, Castro, S, Lagarón, C, Garrido, JM, Vera, P and Coll-de-Tuero, G (2016) Treatment efficacy of anti-hypertensive drugs in monotherapy or combination: ATOM systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials according to PRISMA statement. Medicine (Baltimore) 95(30), e4071.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Peñas, E, Diana, M, Frias, J, Quílez, J and Martínez-Villaluenga, C (2015) A multistrategic approach in the development of sourdough bread targeted towards blood pressure reduction. Plant Foods for Human Nutrition 70(1), 97103.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Perez, PF, Doré, J, Leclerc, M, Levenez, F, Benyacoub, J, Serrant, P, Segura-Roggero, I, Schiffrin, EJ and Donnet-Hughes, A (2007) Bacterial imprinting of the neonatal immune system: Lessons from maternal cells? Pediatrics 119(3), e724e732.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Perez-Pardo, P, Broersen, LM, Kliest, T, van Wijk, N, Attali, A, Garssen, J and Kraneveld, AD (2017) Promising effects of neurorestorative diets on motor, cognitive, and gastrointestinal dysfunction after symptom development in a mouse model of Parkinson’s disease. Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience 9, 57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perez-Pardo, P, Broersen, LM, Kliest, T, van Wijk, N, Attali, A, Garssen, J and Kraneveld, AD (2018a) Additive effects of levodopa and a neurorestorative diet in a mouse model of Parkinson’s disease. Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience 10, 237.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perez-Pardo, P, Dodiya, HB, Broersen, LM, Douna, H, van Wijk, N, Lopes da Silva, S, Garssen, J, Keshavarzian, A and Kraneveld, AD (2018b) Gut–brain and brain–gut axis in Parkinson’s disease models: Effects of a uridine and fish oil diet. Nutritional Neuroscience 21(6), 391402.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Perez-Pardo, P, Dodiya, HB, Engen, PA, Forsyth, CB, Huschens, AM, Shaikh, M, Voigt, RM, Naqib, A, Green, SJ, Kordower, JH, Shannon, KM, Garssen, J, Kraneveld, AD and Keshavarzian, A (2019) Role of TLR4 in the gut–brain axis in Parkinson’s disease: A translational study from men to mice. Gut 68(5), 829843.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pham, VT, Greppi, A, Chassard, C, Braegger, C and Lacroix, C (2022) Stepwise establishment of functional microbial groups in the infant gut between 6 months and 2 years: A prospective cohort study. Frontiers in Nutrition 9, 948131.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pham, VT, Lacroix, C, Braegger, CP and Chassard, C (2017) Lactate-utilizing community is associated with gut microbiota dysbiosis in colicky infants. Scientific Reports 7(1), 11176.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pozuelo, M, Panda, S, Santiago, A, Mendez, S, Accarino, A, Santos, J, Guarner, F, Azpiroz, F and Manichanh, C (2015) Reduction of butyrate- and methane-producing microorganisms in patients with irritable bowel syndrome. Scientific Reports 5, 12693.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Przemska-Kosicka, A, Childs, CE, Maidens, C, Dong, H, Todd, S, Gosney, MA, Tuohy, KM and Yaqoob, P (2018) Age-related changes in the natural killer cell response to seasonal influenza vaccination are not influenced by a synbiotic: A randomised controlled trial. Frontiers in Immunology 9, 591.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Quick, M (2015) Cochrane commentary: Probiotics for prevention of acute upper respiratory infection. Explore (New York, N.Y.) 11(5), 418420.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rampelli, S, Soverini, M, D’Amico, F, Barone, M, Tavella, T, Monti, D, Capri, M, Astolfi, A, Brigidi, P, Biagi, E, Franceschi, C, Turroni, S and Candela, M (2020) Shotgun metagenomics of gut microbiota in humans with up to extreme longevity and the increasing role of xenobiotic degradation. mSystems 5(2), e00124-20.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rashidi, K, Razi, B, Darand, M, Dehghani, A, Janmohammadi, P and Alizadeh, S (2021) Effect of probiotic fermented dairy products on incidence of respiratory tract infections: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials. Nutrition Journal 20(1), 61.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Raveschot, C, Cudennec, B, Coutte, F, Flahaut, C, Fremont, M, Drider, D and Dhulster, P (2018) Production of bioactive peptides by lactobacillus species: From gene to application. Frontiers in Microbiology 9, 2354.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ren, M, Li, H, Fu, Z and Li, Q (2021) Succession analysis of gut microbiota structure of participants from long-lived families in Hechi, Guangxi, China. Microorganisms 9(12), 2524.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rietdijk, CD, Perez-Pardo, P, Garssen, J, van Wezel, RJ and Kraneveld, AD (2017) Exploring Braak’s hypothesis of Parkinson’s disease. Frontiers in Neurology 8, 37.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rocha Martin, VN, Del’Homme, C, Chassard, C, Schwab, C, Braegger, C, Bernalier-Donadille, A and Lacroix, C (2022) A proof-of-concept infant-microbiota associated rat model for studying the role of gut microbiota and alleviation potential of Cutibacterium avidum in infant colic. Frontiers in Nutrition 9, 902159.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rode, J, Edebol Carlman, HMT, König, J, Hutchinson, AN, Thunberg, P, Persson, J and Brummer, RJ (2022) Multi-strain probiotic mixture affects brain morphology and resting state brain function in healthy subjects: An RCT. Cell 11(18), 2922.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rosenzweig, JA, Abogunde, O, Thomas, K, Lawal, A, Nguyen, YU, Sodipe, A and Jejelowo, O (2010) Spaceflight and modeled microgravity effects on microbial growth and virulence. Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology 85(4), 885891. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00253-009-2237-8CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roswall, J, Olsson, LM, Kovatcheva-Datchary, P, Nilsson, S, Tremaroli, V, Simon, MC, Kiilerich, P, Akrami, R, Krämer, M, Uhlén, M, Gummesson, A, Kristiansen, K, Dahlgren, J and Bäckhed, F (2021) Developmental trajectory of the healthy human gut microbiota during the first 5 years of life. Cell Host & Microbe 29(5), 765776.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rothwell, PM (2006) Factors that can affect the external validity of randomised controlled trials. PLoS Clinical Trials 1(1), e9.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Salminen, S, Collado, MC, Endo, A, Hill, C, Lebeer, S, Quigley, EMM, Sanders, ME, Shamir, R, Swann, JR, Szajewska, H and Vinderola, G (2021) The International Scientific Association of Probiotics and Prebiotics (ISAPP) consensus statement on the definition and scope of postbiotics. National Reviews in Gastroenterology & Hepatology 18(9), 649667.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sampson, TR, Debelius, JW, Thron, T, Janssen, S, Shastri, GG, Ilhan, ZE, Challis, C, Schretter, CE, Rocha, S, Gradinaru, V, Chesselet, MF, Keshavarzian, A, Shannon, KM, Krajmalnik-Brown, R, Wittung-Stafshede, P, Knight, R and Mazmanian, SK (2016) Gut microbiota regulate motor deficits and neuroinflammation in a model of Parkinson’s disease. Cell 167(6), 14691480.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sato, Y, Atarashi, K, Plichta, DR, Arai, Y, Sasajima, S, Kearney, SM, Suda, W, Takeshita, K, Sasaki, T, Okamoto, S, Skelly, AN, Okamura, Y, Vlamakis, H, Li, Y, Tanoue, T, Takei, H, Nittono, H, Narushima, S, Irie, J, Itoh, H, Moriya, K, Sugiura, Y, Suematsu, M, Moritoki, N, Shibata, S, Littman, DR, Fischbach, MA, Uwamino, Y, Inoue, T, Honda, A, Hattori, M, Murai, T, Xavier, RJ, Hirose, N and Honda, K (2021) Novel bile acid biosynthetic pathways are enriched in the microbiome of centenarians. Nature 599(7885), 458464.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Scheperjans, F, Derkinderen, P and Borghammer, P (2018) The gut and Parkinson’s disease: Hype or hope? Journal of Parkinson’s Disease 8(s1), S31S39.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schwendner, P, Mahnert, A, Koskinen, K, Moissl-Eichinger, C, Barczyk, S, Wirth, R, Berg, G and Rettberg, P (2017) Preparing for the crewed Mars journey: Microbiota dynamics in the confined Mars500 habitat during simulated Mars flight and landing. Microbiome 5(1), 123.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Scientific Committee on Emerging and Newly Identified Health Risks (SCENIHR), Scientific Committee on Consumer Safety (SCCS) & Scientific Committee on Health and Environmental Risks (SCHER) (2014) Synthetic biology I definition. Available at https://health.ec.europa.eu/publications/synthetic-biology-i-definition_en (accessed 4 April 2023).Google Scholar
Segal, A, Zlotnik, Y, Moyal-Atias, K, Abuhasira, R and Ifergane, G (2021) Fecal microbiota transplant as a potential treatment for Parkinson’s disease – A case series. Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery 207, 106791.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Selma-Royo, M, Calvo-Lerma, J, Bäuerl, C, Esteban-Torres, M, Cabrera-Rubio, R and Collado, MC (2022) Human milk microbiota: What did we learn in the last 20 years? Microbiome Research Reports 1, 19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Selma-Royo, M, García-Mantrana, I, Collado, MC and Perez-Martínez, G (2022) Intake of natural, unprocessed tiger nuts (Cyperus esculentus L.) drink significantly favors intestinal beneficial bacteria in a short period of time. Nutrients 14(9), 1709.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sharif, S, Greer, A, Skorupski, C, Hao, Q, Johnstone, J, Dionne, JC, Lau, V, Manzanares, W, Eltorki, M, Duan, E, Lauzier, F, Marshall, JC, Heels-Ansdell, D, Thabane, L, Cook, DJ and Rochwerg, B (2022) Probiotics in critical illness: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. Critical Care Medicine 50(8), 11751186.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shi, C and Maktabdar, M (2022) Lactic acid bacteria as biopreservation against spoilage molds in dairy products – A review. Frontiers in Microbiology 12, 819684.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shida, K, Sato, T, Iizuka, R, Hoshi, R, Watanabe, O, Igarashi, T, Miyazaki, K, Nanno, M and Ishikawa, F (2017) Daily intake of fermented milk with lactobacillus casei strain Shirota reduces the incidence and duration of upper respiratory tract infections in healthy middle-aged office workers. European Journal of Nutrition 56(1), 4553.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Siedler, S, Balti, R and Neves, AR (2019) Bioprotective mechanisms of lactic acid bacteria against fungal spoilage of food. Current Opinion in Biotechnology 56, 138146.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Staudacher, HM and Whelan, K (2017) The low FODMAP diet: Recent advances in understanding its mechanisms and efficacy in IBS. Gut 66(8), 15171527.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Suda, K and Matsuda, K (2022) How microbes affect depression: Underlying mechanisms via the gut–brain axis and the modulating role of probiotics. International Journal of Molecular Science 23(3), 1172.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sudo, N, Chida, Y, Aiba, Y, Sonoda, J, Oyama, N, Yu, XN, Kubo, C and Koga, Y (2004) Postnatal microbial colonization programs the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system for stress response in mice. Journal of Physiology 558(Pt 1), 263275.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Szajewska, H and Kołodziej, M (2015a) Systematic review with meta-analysis: Saccharomyces boulardii in the prevention of antibiotic-associated diarrhoea. Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics 42(7), 793801.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Szajewska, H and Kołodziej, M (2015b) Systematic review with meta-analysis: Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG in the prevention of antibiotic-associated diarrhoea in children and adults. Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics 42(10), 11491157.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tae Yu, H, Youn, JC, Lee, J, Park, S, Chi, HS, Lee, J, Choi, C, Park, S, Choi, D, Ha, JW and Shin, EC (2015) Characterization of CD8(+)CD57(+) T cells in patients with acute myocardial infarction. Cellular & Molecular Immunology 12(4), 466473.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Takada, M, Nishida, K, Kataoka-Kato, A, Gondo, Y, Ishikawa, H, Suda, K, Kawai, M, Hoshi, R, Watanabe, O, Igarashi, T, Kuwano, Y, Miyazaki, K and Rokutan, K (2016) Probiotic lactobacillus casei strain Shirota relieves stress-associated symptoms by modulating the gut–brain interaction in human and animal models. Neurogastroenterology and Motility 28(7), 10271036.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tenenbaum, M, Deracinois, B, Dugardin, C, Matéos, A, Romelard, A, Auger, J, Boulier, A, Ravallec, R, Flahaut, C and Cudennec, B (2022) Identification, production and bioactivity of casein phosphopeptides - A review. Food Research International 157, 111360.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Treadway, MT, Waskom, ML, Dillon, DG, Holmes, AJ, Park, MTM, Chakravarty, MM, Dutra, SJ, Polli, FE, Iosifescu, DV, Fava, M, Gabrieli, JDE and Pizzagalli, DA (2015) Illness progression, recent stress, and morphometry of hippocampal subfields and medial prefrontal cortex in major depression. Biological Psychiatry 77(3), 285294.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tsilika, M, Thoma, G, Aidoni, Z, Tsaousi, G, Fotiadis, K, Stavrou, G, Malliou, P, Chorti, A, Massa, H, Antypa, E, Vasiliadou, G, Pagdatoglou, K, Voudouris, A, Vasiliagou, S, Mitos, G, Kontopoulou, N, Paraforou, N, Antoniadou, E, Mouloudi, H, Gkeka, E, Grosomanidis, V, Giamarellos-Bourboulis, EJ and Kotzampassi, K (2022) A four-probiotic preparation for ventilator-associated pneumonia in multi-trauma patients: Results of a randomized clinical trial. International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents 59(1), 106471.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tuikhar, N, Keisam, S, Labala, RK, Imrat, Ramakrishnan, P, Arunkumar, MC, Ahmed, G, Biagi, E and Jeyaram, K (2019) Comparative analysis of the gut microbiota in centenarians and young adults shows a common signature across genotypically non-related populations. Mechanisms of Ageing and Development 179, 2335.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van Kessel, SP, Frye, AK, El-Gendy, AO, Castejon, M, Keshavarzian, A, van Dijk, G and El Aidy, S (2019) Gut bacterial tyrosine decarboxylases restrict levels of levodopa in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease. Nature Communications 10(1), 310.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vandenbroucke, RE (2016) A hidden epithelial barrier in the brain with a central role in regulating brain homeostasis. Implications for aging. Annals of the American Thoracic Society 13(Suppl 5), S407S410.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
von Mutius, E, Braun-Fahrländer, C, Schierl, R, Riedler, J, Ehlermann, S, Maisch, S, Waser, M and Nowak, D (2000) Exposure to endotoxin or other bacterial components might protect against the development of atopy. Clinical & Experimental Allergy 30, 12301234.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Voorhies, AA, Mark Ott, C, Mehta, S, Pierson, DL, Crucian, BE, Feiveson, A, Oubre, CM, Torralba, M, Moncera, K, Zhang, Y, Zurek, E and Lorenzi, HA (2019) Study of the impact of long-duration space missions at the international Space Station on the astronaut microbiome. Scientific Reports 9(1), 9911.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wacklin, P, Mäkivuokko, H, Alakulppi, N, Nikkilä, J, Tenkanen, H, Räbinä, J, Partanen, J, Aranko, K and Mättö, J (2011) Secretor genotype (FUT2 gene) is strongly associated with the composition of Bifidobacteria in the human intestine. PLoS One 6(5), e20113.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Walsh, AM, Crispie, F, Kilcawley, K, ’Sullivan O, O, O’Sullivan, MG, Claesson, MJ and Cotter, PD (2016) Microbial succession and flavor production in the fermented dairy beverage kefir. mSystems 1(5), e00052-16.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Waters, JL and Ley, RE (2019) The human gut bacteria Christensenellaceae are widespread, heritable, and associated with health. BMC Biology 17(1), 83.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wu, J, Masuy, I, Biesiekierski, JR, Fitzke, HE, Parikh, C, Schofield, L, Shaikh, H, Bhagwanani, A, Aziz, Q, Taylor, SA, Tack, J and Van Oudenhove, L (2022) Gut–brain axis dysfunction underlies FODMAP-induced symptom generation in irritable bowel syndrome. Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics 55(6), 670682.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Xie, J, Cools, L, Van Imschoot, G, Van Wonterghem, E, Pauwels, MJ, Vlaeminck, I, De Witte, C, Andaloussi, SEL, Wierda, K, De Groef, L, Haesebrouck, F, Van Hoecke, L and Vandenbroucke, RE (2023) Helicobacter pylori-derived outer membrane vesicles contribute to Alzheimer’s disease pathogenesis via C3-C3aR signalling. Journal of Extracellular Vesicles 12, e12306. https://doi.org/10.1002/jev2.12306CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Xie, J, Li, Q, Haesebrouck, F, Van Hoecke, L and Vandenbroucke, RE (2022) The tremendous biomedical potential of bacterial extracellular vesicles. Trends in Biotechnology 40(10), 11731194.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yeoh, YK, Zuo, T, Lui, GC, Zhang, F, Liu, Q, Li, AY, Chung, AC, Cheung, CP, Tso, EY, Fung, KS, Chan, V, Ling, L, Joynt, G, Hui, DS, Chow, KM, Ng, SSS, Li, TC, Ng, RW, Yip, TC, Wong, GL, Chan, FK, Wong, CK, Chan, PK and Ng, SC (2021) Gut microbiota composition reflects disease severity and dysfunctional immune responses in patients with COVID-19. Gut 70, 698706.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
You, J and Yaqoob, P (2012) Evidence of immunomodulatory effects of a novel probiotic, Bifidobacterium longum bv. infantis CCUG 52486. FEMS Immunology and Medical Microbiology 66(3), 353362.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zeilstra, D, Younes, JA, Brummer, RJ and Kleerebezem, M (2018) Perspective: Fundamental limitations of the randomized controlled trial method in nutritional research: The example of probiotics. Advances in Nutrition 9(5), 561571.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zhao, L, Zhang, F, Ding, X, Wu, G, Lam, YY, Wang, X, Fu, H, Xue, X, Lu, C, Ma, J, Yu, L, Xu, C, Ren, Z, Xu, Y, Xu, S, Shen, H, Zhu, X, Shi, Y, Shen, Q, Dong, W, Liu, R, Ling, Y, Zeng, Y, Wang, X, Zhang, Q, Wang, J, Wang, L, Wu, Y, Zeng, B, Wei, H, Zhang, M, Peng, Y and Zhang, C (2018) Gut bacteria selectively promoted by dietary fibers alleviate type 2 diabetes. Science 359(6380), 11511156.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zheng, P, Zeng, B, Zhou, C, Liu, M, Fang, Z, Xu, X, Zeng, L, Chen, J, Fan, S, Du, X, Zhang, X, Yang, D, Yang, Y, Meng, H, Li, W, Melgiri, ND, Licinio, J, Wei, H and Xie, P (2016) Gut microbiome remodelling induces depressive-like behaviors through a pathway mediated by the host’s metabolism. Molecular Psychiatry 21(6), 786796.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zhong, C, Qu, C, Wang, B, Liang, S and Zeng, B (2017) Probiotics for preventing and treating small intestinal bacterial overgrowth: A meta-analysis and systematic review of current evidence. Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology 51(4), 300311.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Figure 1 Summary of the overarching themes of the Symposium.