Since cheese is one of the most commonly and globally consumed fermented foods, scientific investigations in recent decades have focused on determin ing the impact of this dairy product on human health and well-being. However, the modulatory effect exerted by the autochthonous cheese microbial community on the taxonomic composition and associated functional potential of the gut microbiota of human is still far from being fully dissected or understood. Here, through the use of an in vitro human gut-simulating cultivation model in combination with multi-omics approaches, we have shown that minor rather than dominant bacterial players of the cheese microbiota are responsible for gut microbiota modulation of cheese consum ers. These include taxa from the genera Enterococcus, Bacillus, Clostridium, and Hafnia. Indeed, they contribute to expand the functional potential of the intestinal microbial ecosystem by introducing genes responsible for the production of metabolites with relevant biological activity, including genes involved in the synthesis of vitamins, short-chain fatty acids, and amino acids. Furthermore, tracing of cheese microbiota-asso ciated bacterial strains in fecal samples from cheese consumers provided evidence of horizontal transmission events, enabling the detection of particular bacterial strains transferred from cheese to humans. Moreover, transcriptomic and metabolomic analyses of a horizontally transmitted (cheese-to-consumer) bacterial strain, i.e., Hafnia paralvei T10, cultivated in a human gut environment-simulating medium, confirmed the concept that cheese-derived bacteria may expand the functional arsenal of the consumer's gut microbiota. This highlights the functional and biologically relevant contributions of food microbes cheese on the human health.
Functional modulation of the human gut microbiome by bacteria vehicled by cheese / Milani, C.; Longhi, G.; Alessandri, G.; Fontana, F.; Viglioli, M.; Tarracchini, C.; Mancabelli, L.; Lugli, G. A.; Petraro, S.; Argentini, C.; Anzalone, R.; Viappiani, A.; Carli, E.; Vacondio, F.; Van Sinderen, D.; Turroni, F.; Mor, M.; Ventura, M.. - In: APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY. - ISSN 0099-2240. - 91:3(2025). [10.1128/aem.00180-25]
Functional modulation of the human gut microbiome by bacteria vehicled by cheese
Milani C.
;Longhi G.;Alessandri G.;Viglioli M.;Tarracchini C.;Mancabelli L.;Lugli G. A.;Petraro S.;Argentini C.;Anzalone R.;Vacondio F.;van Sinderen D.;Turroni F.;Mor M.;Ventura M.
2025-01-01
Abstract
Since cheese is one of the most commonly and globally consumed fermented foods, scientific investigations in recent decades have focused on determin ing the impact of this dairy product on human health and well-being. However, the modulatory effect exerted by the autochthonous cheese microbial community on the taxonomic composition and associated functional potential of the gut microbiota of human is still far from being fully dissected or understood. Here, through the use of an in vitro human gut-simulating cultivation model in combination with multi-omics approaches, we have shown that minor rather than dominant bacterial players of the cheese microbiota are responsible for gut microbiota modulation of cheese consum ers. These include taxa from the genera Enterococcus, Bacillus, Clostridium, and Hafnia. Indeed, they contribute to expand the functional potential of the intestinal microbial ecosystem by introducing genes responsible for the production of metabolites with relevant biological activity, including genes involved in the synthesis of vitamins, short-chain fatty acids, and amino acids. Furthermore, tracing of cheese microbiota-asso ciated bacterial strains in fecal samples from cheese consumers provided evidence of horizontal transmission events, enabling the detection of particular bacterial strains transferred from cheese to humans. Moreover, transcriptomic and metabolomic analyses of a horizontally transmitted (cheese-to-consumer) bacterial strain, i.e., Hafnia paralvei T10, cultivated in a human gut environment-simulating medium, confirmed the concept that cheese-derived bacteria may expand the functional arsenal of the consumer's gut microbiota. This highlights the functional and biologically relevant contributions of food microbes cheese on the human health.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


