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Probiotics and Fermented Foods in Human Nutrition
by
Dini, Irene
in
Amino acids
/ Bacteria
/ bioactive metabolites
/ Dietary Supplements
/ Fatty acids
/ Fermentation
/ Fermented Foods - microbiology
/ Food
/ Food Microbiology
/ food risk assessment
/ food safety
/ Functional Food
/ Functional foods
/ Humans
/ Metabolites
/ microbial metabolism
/ Microbiology
/ Microbiota (Symbiotic organisms)
/ nutraceutical development
/ Peptides
/ postbiotics
/ Probiotics
/ Review
/ Safety and security measures
/ Yeast
2026
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Probiotics and Fermented Foods in Human Nutrition
by
Dini, Irene
in
Amino acids
/ Bacteria
/ bioactive metabolites
/ Dietary Supplements
/ Fatty acids
/ Fermentation
/ Fermented Foods - microbiology
/ Food
/ Food Microbiology
/ food risk assessment
/ food safety
/ Functional Food
/ Functional foods
/ Humans
/ Metabolites
/ microbial metabolism
/ Microbiology
/ Microbiota (Symbiotic organisms)
/ nutraceutical development
/ Peptides
/ postbiotics
/ Probiotics
/ Review
/ Safety and security measures
/ Yeast
2026
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Do you wish to request the book?
Probiotics and Fermented Foods in Human Nutrition
by
Dini, Irene
in
Amino acids
/ Bacteria
/ bioactive metabolites
/ Dietary Supplements
/ Fatty acids
/ Fermentation
/ Fermented Foods - microbiology
/ Food
/ Food Microbiology
/ food risk assessment
/ food safety
/ Functional Food
/ Functional foods
/ Humans
/ Metabolites
/ microbial metabolism
/ Microbiology
/ Microbiota (Symbiotic organisms)
/ nutraceutical development
/ Peptides
/ postbiotics
/ Probiotics
/ Review
/ Safety and security measures
/ Yeast
2026
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Journal Article
Probiotics and Fermented Foods in Human Nutrition
2026
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Overview
Fermented foods and probiotics represent complementary yet distinct components of human nutrition. Fermented foods are shaped by biochemical transformations driven by microbial metabolism, whereas probiotics are live microorganisms that may confer health benefits to the host. In both cases, bacteria, yeasts, and filamentous fungi mediate key metabolic activities that generate bioactive compounds and modulate host–microbiota interactions. During fermentation, microbial communities synthesize organic acids, peptides, exopolysaccharides, vitamins, and other metabolites that enhance food safety, sensory attributes, and potential health-promoting properties. Several microbial products, such as bacteriocins, reuterin, hydroxylated fatty acids, and exopolysaccharides, exhibit antimicrobial, immunomodulatory, antioxidant, and cholesterol-lowering activities. Advancing our understanding of microbial metabolism in fermented foods is essential for developing next-generation functional foods and nutraceuticals that leverage microbial biotransformations to support human health. Nonetheless, multiple challenges limit the translation of these advances into commercial products. Inadequately controlled fermentation may introduce microbiological or chemical hazards, regulatory frameworks governing microbial use in foods remain insufficiently defined, and standardized procedures for microbial strain handling and characterization are still lacking. This narrative review integrates current evidence on the nutraceutical properties of fermented foods and probiotics, while also examining the associated safety considerations and the technological factors that influence fermentation processes.
Publisher
MDPI AG,Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
Subject
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