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REVIEW: Cereal Carbohydrates and Colon Health

July 2010 Volume 87 Number 4
Pages 331 — 341
Genyi Zhang 1 , 2 and Bruce R. Hamaker 2 , 3

School of Food Science and Technology, Jiangnan University, Wuxi 214122, PR China. Whistler Center for Carbohydrate Research and Department of Food Science, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907-1160. Corresponding author. E-mail: hamakerb@purdue.edu


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Accepted April 28, 2010.
ABSTRACT

Providing balanced energy and nutrients for microbiota growth is essential for the maintenance of the colon ecosystem, and dietary fiber (DF) fermentation, particularly butyrogenic fermentation, augments colon health. Cereal DF, which are the complex carbohydrates of cereal grains that escape small intestine digestion and function either as substrate for colonic fermentation or as bulking material, are a dietary measure to mitigate the occurrence of certain colonic diseases, and perhaps to some degree act as therapeutic agents. In developed Western countries, as well as in many developing countries, colon cancer is one of the major causes for premature death and disability, and inflammatory bowel disease and other colonic disorders have become serious health issues. The function of DF in colon health is mediated through its physicochemical properties (e.g., water-holding for laxative effect) or effect on colon microbiota (e.g., leading to immune regulation), as well as through colonic fermentation products, principally the short chain fatty acids (SCFA) of acetate, propionate, and butyrate. Due to the chemical diversity and complexity of DF and because not all DF materials function equally, new developments in DF fermentation behavior (pattern and end product profile) will be reviewed from a structure-function viewpoint. The effect of cereal DF, mainly nonstarch cereal polysaccharides and resistant starch on colonic microbiota, fermentation products of SCFA, microbiota modulation, as well as on colon health will be summarized.



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