Sunanda Biswas1*, Ali Imran2, Fakhar Islam2,3, Muhammad Umair Arshad2, Iqra Aslam2, Mohd Asif Shah4, Umber Shehzadi2, Ifrah Usman2, Izza Faiz UL Rasool2, Safura Aslam2
1Department of Food and Nutrition, Acharya Prafulla Chandra College, Kolkata-India.
2Department of Food Science, Government College University Faisalabad-Pakistan.
3Department of Clinical Nutrition, NUR International University, Lahore, Pakistan.
4Adjunct Faculty, University Center for Research and Development, Chandigarh University, Gharuan, Mohali India.
Corresponding Author E-mail: sunandafnt@gmail.com
The gut microbiota has the capacity to de-novo manufacture or change endogenous and exogenous substances to produce or alter xenometabolites (i.e., non-host-derived metabolites). A wide-scale characterization of these metabolites is still lacking, despite rare instances of xenometabolites impacting host health and illness. Numerous studies have been conducted to investigate how the gut microbiome affects individual function and health, including links between specific intestinal microorganism populations and metabolites and the health of the systemic-immune system and gastrointestinal tract. The current review article delves into the sources of xenometabolites and the role of modeling in addressing the complexity of the xenometabolites process, as well as various nutraceutical benefits such as antibiotics, anti-tumor, and anti-cancer action.
Antibiotics; Anti-cancer; Anti-tumor; Promote growth; Xenometabolites