Soy Sauce-like Seasoning Enhances the Growth of and the Production of Butyrate, Propionate, and Lactate
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The short-chain fatty acids responsible for gut homeostasis are volatile fatty acids produced by commensal bacteria in the gut as fermentation products from undigested food components. Among the short-chain fatty acids, butyrate is important for maintaining intestinal tract anaerobic conditions, promoting epithelial barrier functions, and inducing regulatory T cells that suppress inflammatory bowel disease and allergic diarrhea. However, the type of food-derived molecular components and mechanisms by which they regulate the growth and butyrate production of butyrate-producing bacteria are not clearly understood. is a butyrate-producing bacterium highly colonized in the gut of the Japanese population. In this study, we investigated the effects on of a soy sauce-like seasoning made by brewing with a low salt concentration. The soy sauce-like seasoning promoted the growth of 2.6-fold. An ethanol precipitate prepared from the soy sauce-like seasoning was critical for promoting the growth of and the production of butyrate, propionate, and lactate. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) analysis suggested that polysaccharides were active ingredients in the ethanol precipitate of the soy sauce-like seasoning. Inulin, a representative prebiotic with effects against butyrate-producing bacteria, had a limited effect on the growth of compared with the soy sauce-like seasoning. Our results indicate that polysaccharides in a soy sauce-like seasoning contributed to the growth of and enhanced production of butyrate, propionate, and lactate.
Guan J, Xu T, Lin Y, Mo Y, He B, Han Y Gut Pathog. 2025; 17(1):7.
PMID: 39885529 PMC: 11783801. DOI: 10.1186/s13099-025-00682-8.