Plant-Derived Foods and Medicines as Modulators of the Gut Microbiome: Molecular Interactions and Implications for Disease and Therapy.
Mitea G, Schröder V, Radu MD, Mireșan H, Iancu IM
Medicinal Plants
Herbs and vegetables you grow — garlic, ginger, chamomile, turmeric — don't just flavor your food; the compounds they release feed specific gut bacteria that can shift how well your body absorbs medicines and fights chronic illness.
Inside your gut lives a vast community of microbes that react to what you eat, especially plant-based foods and herbal remedies. These microbes break down plant compounds into smaller molecules that can either help or hinder how your body handles disease and medication. Scientists are now recognizing that the plants you eat don't just nourish you directly — they work through this hidden microbial layer, which varies from person to person and explains why the same food or herb affects people so differently.
Key Findings
Plant-derived foods and medicines interact with gut microbiota to produce bioactive metabolites that directly influence host signaling pathways and therapeutic outcomes.
The gut microbiome plays a measurable role in drug metabolism and resistance to therapy, meaning microbiome composition can predict or alter how well a patient responds to treatment.
Microbiome analysis is identified as a tool for improving diagnosis, disease monitoring, and personalized medical strategies for chronic diseases.
chevron_right Technical Summary
A review study found that plants we eat and use as medicine directly shape the community of bacteria living in our gut, and those bacteria in turn change how our bodies process both food and drugs — with real consequences for treating chronic diseases.
Abstract Preview
The digestive system is one of the most complex systems in the body, integrating multiple functions, closely linked to and influenced by chemosensory mechanisms, as well as by the presence, composi...
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