Key Points

A new study highlights how traditional fermented foods can improve health for India's diverse population. Bioactive peptides in foods like idli and yogurt regulate blood pressure, immunity, and inflammation. The research suggests tailored nutrition plans due to genetic and gut microbiome differences. The findings could position India as a leader in personalized health solutions.

Key Points: Study Finds Traditional Fermented Foods Boost Health for Diverse Indians

  • Fermented foods like idli and yogurt contain bioactive peptides
  • Peptides aid blood sugar, immunity, and heart health
  • Effects vary by genetics and gut microbiome
  • Study calls for precision nutrition for India's diversity
2 min read

Traditional fermented food can help India's diverse population stay fit

IASST research reveals bioactive peptides in fermented foods like idli and yogurt can enhance immunity, heart health, and blood sugar control for India's varied population.

Traditional fermented food can help India's diverse population stay fit
"These peptides can regulate blood pressure, immunity, and inflammation through unique interactions with biomolecules. – Prof. Ashis K. Mukherjee, IASST Director"

New Delhi, Aug 14

A study of population-specific responses to fermented food shows that the health effect of the bioactive peptides they contain, differ across populations and can personalise nutrition for India's diverse population, the government said on Thursday.

A recent study conducted by Institute of Advanced Study in Science and Technology (IASST), Guwahati, an autonomous institute of the Department of Science and Technology (DST) emphasises the health benefits of traditional fermented foods.

They showed that the bioactive peptides (BAPs) or short protein fragments consisting of 2 to 20 amino acids that they contain can regulate blood pressure, blood sugar, immunity and inflammation.

The study, published in Food Chemistry and led by Professor Ashis K. Mukherjee, corresponding author and Director IASST – along with Dr Maloyjo Joyraj Bhattacharjee, Dr Asis Bala, and Dr. Mojibr Khan -- showed that foods such as yogurt, idli, miso, natto, kimchi and fermented fish contain high levels of these peptides.

These short peptides, formed during fermentation, interact with biomolecules through electrostatic forces, hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic interactions to exert antimicrobial, antihypertensive, antioxidant and immune-modulatory effects.

This can influence cardiac function, immune response and metabolic health. However, their bioavailability and effectiveness vary across populations due to genetic polymorphisms, gut microbiota composition, dietary habits and health conditions. Gene variants in ACE or IL-6 may affect individual responses to these peptides.

This data emphasises the necessity for precision nutrition and targeted health interventions customized to the diverse Indian population, according to the Ministry of Science and Technology.

The research can address challenges such as variability in fermentation methods, peptide stability and interactions with the microbiota. The study advocates incorporating traditional fermented foods into public health initiatives.

It emphasizes the need for omics-based (biological research that utilize high-throughput technologies to analyse large sets of molecules) research and innovation in rural food systems to establish India as a global leader in personalised nutrition.

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- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Interesting research but how practical is this for urban Indians? Most working professionals don't have time for traditional fermentation processes. We need modern solutions that preserve these benefits.
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Arjun K
As someone from Northeast India, I'm glad they included fermented fish in the study. Our traditional foods like ngari and tungtap have amazing health benefits that mainstream India should explore!
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Nisha Z
While the research is promising, I wish they'd address food safety concerns with traditional fermentation. Many rural households don't follow proper hygiene standards which can lead to contamination.
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Vikram M
This is why we must document and preserve regional food knowledge before it's lost. Every Indian state has unique fermented foods - from Gujarati dhokla to Assamese xaj-pani. Our food diversity is our strength!
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Kavya N
The government should include this in school nutrition programs. Imagine if midday meals included probiotic-rich traditional foods instead of just khichdi. Future generations would be healthier 🇮🇳
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David E
Fascinating study! As someone new to India, I've been amazed by the variety of fermented foods here. The science behind why they're healthy makes me appreciate them even more. More research like this please!

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