(Press-News.org) Contact information: Caron Lett
caron.lett@york.ac.uk
44-019-043-22029
University of York
York scientists investigate the fiber of our being
We are all aware of the health benefits of "dietary fibre". But what is dietary fibre and how do we metabolise it?
Research at the University of York's Structural Biology Laboratory, in collaboration with groups in Canada, the USA and Sweden, has begun to uncover how our gut bacteria metabolise the complex dietary carbohydrates found in fruits and vegetables.
Trillions of bacteria live in human intestines - there are about ten times more bacterial cells in the average person's body than human ones. Known as "microbiota", these bacteria have a vital role to play in human health: they are central to our metabolism and well-being.
The research team has uncovered how one group of gut bacteria, known as Bacteroidetes, digest complex sugars known as xyloglucans. These make up to 25 per cent of the dry weight of dietary fruit and vegetables including lettuce, onion, aubergine and tomatoes.
Understanding how these bacteria digest complex carbohydrates informs studies on a wide range of nutritional issues. These include prebiotics (the consumption of 'beneficial' micro-organisms as a food supplement) and probiotics (the consumption of foods or supplements intended to stimulate the production of healthy bacteria in the gut).
Researchers from the York Structural Biology Laboratory in the University's Department of Chemistry, and international collaborators have carried out detailed structural and mechanistic studies into the precise functioning of specific enzymes. This work has shed further light on which organisms can and cannot digest certain fruits and vegetables, and how and why the "good bacteria" do what they do.
Professor Gideon Davies, who led the research at York, said: "Despite our omnivorous diet, humans aren't well equipped to eat complex plant matter; for this we rely on our gut bacteria. This work is helping us to understand the science of that process.
"The possible implications for commerce and industry extend beyond the realm of human nutrition, however. The study of how enzymes break down plant matter is also of direct relevance to the development of processes for environmentally-friendly energy solutions such as biofuels."
The research at York was funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)
### END
York scientists investigate the fiber of our being
2014-01-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Cleveland Clinic identifies mechanism in Alzheimer's-related memory loss
2014-01-20
Cleveland Clinic identifies mechanism in Alzheimer's-related memory loss
Study uncovers role of Neuroligin-1 protein
Sunday, Jan. 19, 2014, Cleveland: Cleveland Clinic researchers have identified a protein in the brain that plays a critical role in the memory loss seen in ...
Researchers discover how heart arrhythmia occurs
2014-01-20
Researchers discover how heart arrhythmia occurs
Researchers have discovered the fundamental biology of calcium waves in relation to heart arrhythmias.
The findings published this month in the January 19 edition of Nature Medicine outlines the discovery of this ...
Decoded: DNA of blood-sucking worm that infects world's poor
2014-01-20
Decoded: DNA of blood-sucking worm that infects world's poor
Going barefoot in parts of Africa, Asia and South America contributes to hookworm infections, which afflict an estimated 700 million of the world's poor. The parasitic worm lives ...
How a versatile gut bacterium helps us get our daily dietary fiber
2014-01-20
How a versatile gut bacterium helps us get our daily dietary fiber
University of British Columbia researchers have discovered the genetic machinery that turns a common gut bacterium into the Swiss Army knife of the digestive tract – helping us metabolize ...
Secondhand smoke exposure increases odds of hospital asthma readmission for children
2014-01-20
Secondhand smoke exposure increases odds of hospital asthma readmission for children
A new study shows that exposure to secondhand smoke at home or in the car dramatically increases the odds of children being readmitted to the hospital within ...
NHL teams pay more than $650 million to injured players over 3 years
2014-01-20
NHL teams pay more than $650 million to injured players over 3 years
Concussions are the most expensive injury
TORONTO, Jan. 20, 2014 -- Most successful businesses would not accept spending $218 million on lost time, but that's the amount NHL owners pay out every ...
New sea anemone species discovered in Antarctica
2014-01-18
New sea anemone species discovered in Antarctica
ANDRILL team finds Edwardsiella andrillae sea anemones burrowed in underside of Ross Ice Shelf
National Science Foundation (NSF)-funded researchers from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, while using a camera-equipped ...
New study reveals links between alcoholic liver disease and the circadian clock
2014-01-18
New study reveals links between alcoholic liver disease and the circadian clock
Researchers from the University of Notre Dame and the Indiana University School of Medicine have revealed a putative role for the circadian clock in the liver in the development ...
What comforts targets of prejudice the most
2014-01-18
What comforts targets of prejudice the most
Rare in history are moments like the 1960s civil rights movement, in which members of a majority group vocally support minority groups in their fight against prejudice. New research not ...
The bigger the tree, the faster it grows
2014-01-18
The bigger the tree, the faster it grows
Older trees remove bigger share of carbon from atmosphere
Lincoln, Neb., Jan. 15, 2013 -- Contrary to long-held misconceptions, trees never stop growing during their lifespans, a new study has found.
In fact, as they ...