Arabinoxylo-oligosaccharides (AXOS) are non-digestible dietary fibers that potentially confer a health benefit by stimulating beneficial bacteria in the gut. Still, a detailed overview of the diversity of gut bacteria and their specificity to utilize structurally different AXOS has not been provided to date and was aimed for in this study. Moreover, we assessed the genetic information of summarized bacteria, and we extracted genes expected to encode for enzymes that are involved in AXOS hydrolysis (based on the CAZy database). The taxa involved in AXOS fermentation in the gut display a large variety of AXOS-active enzymes in their genome and consequently utilize AXOS to a highly different extent. Clostridia and Bacteroidales are generalists that consume many structurally diverse AXOS, whereas are specialists that specifically consume AXOS with a low degree of polymerization. Further complexity is evident from the fact that the exact bacterial species, and in some cases even the bacterial strains (e.g. in ) that are stimulated, highly depend on the specific AXOS molecular structure. Furthermore, certain species in and are active as cross-feeders and consume monosaccharides and unbranched short xylo-oligosaccharides released from AXOS. Our review highlights the possibility that (enzymatic) fine-tuning of specific AXOS structures leads to improved precision in targeting growth of specific beneficial bacterial species and strains in the gut.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11610566PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19490976.2024.2430419DOI Listing

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