For over a century, physicians have witnessed a common enrichment of bifidobacteria in the feces of breast-fed infants that was readily associated with infant health status. Recent advances in bacterial genomics, metagenomics, and glycomics have helped explain the nature of this unique enrichment and enabled the tailored use of probiotic supplementation to restore missing bifidobacterial functions in at-risk infants. This review documents a 20-year span of discoveries that set the stage for the current use of human milk oligosaccharide-consuming bifidobacteria to beneficially colonize, modulate, and protect the intestines of at-risk, human milk-fed, neonates. This review also presents a model for probiotic applications wherein bifidobacterial , in the form of colonization and HMO-related catabolic activity , represent measurable metabolic outcomes by which probiotic efficacy can be scored toward improving infant health.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10075334PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19490976.2023.2192458DOI Listing

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