Ai Wei Gan , Xing Kang , Shermin S. Goh , Sunny H. Wong , Say Chye Joachim Loo
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Probiotics are widely used in food and supplements for their health benefits. Increasing evidence shows that certain strains can help prevent colorectal cancer (CRC). Traditional probiotics have been shown to prevent carcinogenesis via secretion of anti-proliferative metabolites, downregulation of inflammatory or oncogenic pathways, and reduction of cell proliferation, whereas novel bacterial strains may also confer benefits as Next Generation Probiotics (NGPs). However, to deliver these probiotics effectively to the colon, their primary site of action, the microbes must survive through the harsh gastrointestinal environment. Particularly, NGPs are sensitive to oxygen, making it challenging for their practical use. Thus, their protection is of paramount importance. This review discusses the use of traditional probiotics and newly discovered NGPs as functional food for CRC prevention, the current encapsulation techniques and materials used for effective encapsulation of the probiotics, and the challenges and future directions for the development of encapsulated probiotics as functional food.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Functional Foods continues with the same aims and scope, editorial team, submission system and rigorous peer review. We give authors the possibility to publish their top-quality papers in a well-established leading journal in the food and nutrition fields. The Journal will keep its rigorous criteria to screen high impact research addressing relevant scientific topics and performed by sound methodologies.
The Journal of Functional Foods aims to bring together the results of fundamental and applied research into healthy foods and biologically active food ingredients.
The Journal is centered in the specific area at the boundaries among food technology, nutrition and health welcoming papers having a good interdisciplinary approach. The Journal will cover the fields of plant bioactives; dietary fibre, probiotics; functional lipids; bioactive peptides; vitamins, minerals and botanicals and other dietary supplements. Nutritional and technological aspects related to the development of functional foods and beverages are of core interest to the journal. Experimental works dealing with food digestion, bioavailability of food bioactives and on the mechanisms by which foods and their components are able to modulate physiological parameters connected with disease prevention are of particular interest as well as those dealing with personalized nutrition and nutritional needs in pathological subjects.