通过对因纽特发酵食品的合作研究,更好地了解食品和人类微生物组。

比较化学 Pub Date : 2022-01-24 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.20517/mrr.2021.06
Robyn Campbell, Aviaja Hauptmann, Kristina Campbell, Shari Fox, Maria L Marco
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引用次数: 2

摘要

关于环北极地区因纽特人制作的动物源性发酵食品的报道,缺乏对其独特微生物群和制作这些食品的地理-社会-文化背景的考虑,结果往往强化了负面的刻板印象。在研究因纽特人发酵食品时,基于缺陷的研究方法忽视了一个事实,即发酵食品一直被认为是健康的,是因纽特人饮食中不可或缺的一部分。因纽特人对发酵食品的收获、制作、分享和消费有着深刻的了解,研究工作必须借鉴并承认这一点。我们对因纽特人动物来源发酵食品的初步研究扩展了目前对制作这些食品所需的微生物的了解,并指出了了解这些食品和其他发酵食品如何影响人类肠道微生物组的潜力。我们为因纽特人发酵食品的微生物研究提供了建议,这些研究将因纽特人的知识集中在制作这些食品的特定地理、社会和文化背景中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Better understanding of food and human microbiomes through collaborative research on Inuit fermented foods.

Reports on fermented, animal-sourced foods made by Inuit around the circumpolar North have lacked consideration for their unique microbiota and the geo-socio-cultural contexts in which they are made, often resulting in reinforced negative stereotypes. Deficit-based approaches to studying Inuit fermented foods overlook the fact that they have long been considered healthy and integral to Inuit diets. Inuit have deep knowledge on the harvesting, preparation, sharing, and consumption of fermented foods that research efforts must learn from and acknowledge. Our preliminary research into Inuit animal-sourced fermented foods expands current knowledge about the microorganisms needed to make them, and points to a potential to understand how these and other fermented foods impact the human gut microbiome. We provide recommendations for microbiological research on Inuit fermented foods that centers Inuit knowledge within the specific geographic, social, and cultural contexts in which these foods are made.

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