“…As a well-known traditional Chinese fermented food with multiple health benefits, such as hypolipidemic, antimutagenic, antioxidative, antitumor, antiobesity, and toxicity-suppressing activities (16), it is popular in Southeast Asia and is becoming increasingly popular in the Western world. Microbial communities in the fermentation of pu-erh tea have previously been studied using culture methods and culture-independent approaches, including denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis, 16S rRNA gene clonal library, and next-generation sequencing (17). Recently, a study by Li et al (18) using shotgun metagenomic and metabolomic analyses showed that significant variations in the composition of microbiota, collective functional genes, and flavor compounds occurred during the fermentation process.…”