| Literature DB >> 26828501 |
Maria Filomena de Jesus Raposo1, Alcina Maria Miranda Bernardo de Morais2, Rui Manuel Santos Costa de Morais3.
Abstract
In recent years, scientists have become aware that human microbiota, in general, and gut microbiota, in particular, play a major role in human health and diseases, such as obesity and diabetes, among others. A large number of evidence has come to light regarding the beneficial effects, either for the host or the gut microbiota, of some foods and food ingredients or biochemical compounds. Among these, the most promising seem to be polysaccharides (PS) or their derivatives, and they include the dietary fibers. Some of these PS can be found in seaweeds and microalgae, some being soluble fibers, such as alginates, fucoidans, carrageenans and exopolysaccharides, that are not fermented, at least not completely, by colonic microbiota. This review gives an overview of the importance of the dietary fibers, as well as the benefits of prebiotics, to human health. The potential of the PS from marine macro- and microalgae to act as prebiotics is discussed, and the different techniques to obtain oligosaccharides from PS are presented. The mechanisms of the benefits of fiber, in general, and the types and benefits of algal fibers in human health are highlighted. The findings of some recent studies that present the potential effects of prebiotics on animal models of algal biomass and their extracts, as well as oligo- and polysaccharides, are presented. In the future, the possibility of using prebiotics to modulate the microbiome, and, consequently, prevent certain human diseases is foreseen.Entities:
Keywords: PS; algae; fibre; health benefits; microalgae; microbiota; polysaccharides; prebiotics; seaweeds
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26828501 PMCID: PMC4771980 DOI: 10.3390/md14020027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Dietary fibre content of marine algae in comparison with some foods (vegetables, grains, fruits).
| Type of Algae | Total Fiber (% DW) | Soluble Fiber (% DW) | Insoluble Fiber (% DW) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 35–62 1 | 30–38 | 5–32 | [ | |
| 42.86 2 | ||||
| 56.34 | [ | |||
| 10–75 2 | ||||
| 63.88 | 27–40 1 | [ | ||
| 50.09 ± 1.77 | [ | |||
| 45–59 2 | ||||
| 32.7 | 25.7 | 7.0 | [ | |
| 33–37 2 | ||||
| 62.3 ± 0.7 | [ | |||
| 36.0 ± 5.7 | 27–40 1 | [ | ||
| 37.3 | 32.6 | 4.7 | [ | |
| 36–37 2 | ||||
| 10–41 2 | ||||
| 30 2 | ||||
| 17–69 2 | ||||
| 35.3–45.9 | 30.0–33 | 5.3–6 | [ | |
| 16–51 2 | ||||
|
| ||||
| 10–34 2 | ||||
| 57.37 | [ | |||
| 28.0 c | [ | |||
| 50.3 ± 2.78 | [ | |||
| 53.2 ± 0.56 | [ | |||
| 33.82 | [ | |||
| 29–46 2 | ||||
| 48.6 ± 5.90 | 18 | [ | ||
| 40.98 | ||||
| 35–49 1 | ||||
| 34.7 | 17.9 | 16.8 | [ | |
| 12–35 2 | ||||
| 43.0 c | 34 | 9 | [ | |
| 29–35 2 | ||||
| 30–59 2 | ||||
| 35.5 (biomass) | 8.5 | 27 | [ | |
| 45 (EPS) | 37 | 8 | ||
| 52.08 | [ | |||
| 41.25 | [ | |||
|
| ||||
| 38–59 2 | ||||
| 33–41 2 | ||||
| 39–67 2 | ||||
| 33.4 | 17.2 | 16.2 | [ | |
| 381 | 21 | 17 | ||
| 41.16 | [ | |||
| 29–45 2 | ||||
| 55.4 ± 2.00 | [ | |||
| 38.1–43 c | 21.3–24 | 16.8–19 | ||
| 29–55 2 | ||||
| 52.1 | [ | |||
| 65.7 2 | ||||
| 38–41 2 | ||||
|
| ||||
| Apple | 2 g/100 g | 0.9 3 | [ | |
| 14.2% DW | ||||
| Bean | 3.0 g/100 g 3, e | 0.2 | ||
| Brown rice | 3.8% DW | [ | ||
| Cabbage | 2.3–2.9 g/100 g e | 0.3 3 | [ | |
| 34.3% DW | ||||
| Lentils | 8.9 g/100 g | [ | ||
| Rye | 20.5 g/100 g 3 | 4.8 | ||
| Wheat bran | 85% DW | [ |
a approved as edible in France [9]; b considered as edible by Dawczynski et al. [10]; c values were recalculated in order to be presented in DW basis; d indicated as edible by McLachlan et al. [19]; e cooked; 1 data compiled by Kraan [6]; 2 data from several research groups were compiled by Pereira [20]; 3 data collected by Praznik et al. [21].
Health benefits and basic structures of some algal PS (native or somehow modified, such as LMW-PS) similar to dietary fibers [45,46].
| Polysaccharide/LMW-PS | Health Benefit | Main Glycosidic Linkages and Monomers along the Main Chain | Algal Genera |
|---|---|---|---|
| sPS | Antilipidaemic/hypocholesterolaemic | ||
| s-laminaran | (1,3)- and (1,6)-β-glc | ||
| s-fucan | |||
| s-galactofucan | (1,3)- and (1,4)-α- | ||
| s-galactan (porphyran) | (1,3)-β- | ||
| s-ulvan | (→4)-β- | ||
| (→4)-α- | |||
| sPS | Antiglycaemic | ||
| (s)PS | Immunomodulatory | ||
| s-fucan | (1,3)-α- | ||
| s-fucan | (1,3)- and (1,4)-α- | ||
| s-laminaran | (1,3)- and (1,6)-β-glc | ||
| s-galactofucan | (1,3)- and (1,4)-α- | ||
| s-ulvan | (→4)-β- | ||
| (→4)-α- | |||
| (s-) rhamnan | |||
| LMW-sPS | |||
| LMW-carrageenan | (1,3)-α- | ||
| s-mannan |
B, brown; CB, cyanobacteria; G, green; Diat, diatom; Dino, dinoflagellate; R, red; Agal, anhydrous galactose; fuc, fucose; gal, galactose; glc, glucose; glcAc, glucuronic acid; IduAc, iduronic acid; rham, rhamnose; sPS/-other, sulphated PS (in general) or any specific PS .
Figure 1Effects of SCFAs on the expression of several genes, which regulate the production of different proteins and some anti-inflammatory cytokines (colored in green) involved in the immunity status and protection from inflammation. SCFAs also regulate the release of GLP-1, responsible for the increase in the production of insulin and decrease in glucagon (in green), which reduces blood glucose levels. Additional benefits provided by SCFAs are indicated by bold dashed arrows. Specific properties of the main SCFAs (propionate, acetate and butyrate), and the target organs are illustrated as well.
Effects attributed to pro- and prebiotics, and mechanisms through which benefits are exerted.
| Effect | Mechanisms | References |
|---|---|---|
| IBD a, b | reduction of pro-inflammatory immune markers and also of calprotectin | [ |
| Ulcerative colitis a, b | ||
| Pouchitis b | ||
| Crohn’s disease b | ||
| IBS a | ||
| Colon cancer, prevention | significant reduction of putrefactive compounds | [ |
| production of butyrate to act as protective agent | ||
| mediation by colonic microbiota, as bifidobacteria may shift down carcinogenic promoters and genotoxins | ||
| reduction on biomarkers for cancer | ||
| reduction of cell proliferation | ||
| Bone mass/density | enhancement of calcium absorption a, b, due to the release of SCFAs | [ |
| shift down of gut pH due to the production of SCFAs | ||
| Regulation of gut metabolism/transit | reduction of constipation of diarrhea and dysentery | [ |
| Antibiotic-associated and traveller | reduction of the prevalence of/prevention from diarrhoea b | [ |
| diarrhoea | ||
| Improvement of the immune system | production of pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α) | [ |
| expression of receptors on macrophages and lymphocytes T and B are stimulated |
Other effects of prebiotics are promising in lipid metabolism, as hypoglycemic, immuno-modulators, regulating release of hormones in the gut, weight loss and increase of satiety sensation. Gibson et al. [74] published a review on this subject. a studies with animals; b studies/trials with humans; IBD = inflammatory bowel diseases; IBS = irritable bowel syndrome; TNF = tumour necrosis factor.
Prebiotic effect of algal biomass, their extracts and oligo- and polysaccharides.
| Oligo-/PS | Algal Genus | Effects | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| alginate | - | ↑ | rats | [ |
| NAOS (native and hydrolysates, DP 4–12) | - | ↑ | mice/rats ( | [ |
| ↑ | ||||
| laminaran | - | ↑ | rats ( | [ |
| laminaran + fucoidan | - | ↑ lactobacilli | weanling pigs | [ |
| extracts | rats | [ | ||
| biomass | ↑ | weanling pigs | [ | |
| biomass/extracts | ↑ SCFAs | weanling pigs | [ | |
| fucoidan | - | ↑ lactobacteria | pigs | [ |
| ↑ fatty acids | ||||
| alginate | - | ↑ beneficial bacteria of microbiota | humans | [ |
| ALGOS and native or LMW-PSs | ● positive effects on the microbiota and on the production of SCFAs | rats | [ | |
| FUCOS | - | ↑ beneficial bacteria | - | [ |
| AGAROS | - | - | [ | |
| ● act against glycosidase | ||||
| extracts | ↑ bifidobacteria; best with
| [ | ||
| ↑ total SCFAs, and acetic and propionic acids; best with
| ||||
| biomass | ↑ beneficial bacteria | rats | [ | |
| ● improvement of microbiota | ||||
| ↑ SCFAs | ||||
| ● improvement in the histo-morphology of the colon | ||||
| ↑ holding-water capacity of stool | ||||
| ● enhancement of immune system: | ||||
| biomass | ↑ | [ | ||
| biomass | ↑ lactic acid bacteria | rats | [ |
↑ increase; ↓ decrease.