The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of
tannins
on gut microbiota composition and activity, and to evaluate the use
of pectin-microencapsulation of tannins as a potential mode of tannin
delivery. Thus, pectin-tannin microcapsules and unencapsulated tannin
extracts were in vitro digested and fermented, and
polyphenol content, antioxidant capacity, microbiota modulation, and
short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production were analyzed. Pectin microcapsules
were not able to release their tannin content, keeping it trapped
after the digestive process, and are therefore not recommended for
tannin delivery. Unencapsulated tannin extracts were found to exert
a positive effect on the human gut microbiota. The digestion step
resulted to be a fundamental requirement in order to maximize tannin
bioactive effects, especially with regard to condensed tannins, as
the antioxidant capacity exerted and the SCFAs produced were greater
when tannins were submitted to digestion prior to fermentation. Moreover,
tannins interacted differently with the intestinal microbiota depending
on whether they underwent prior digestion or not. Polyphenol content
and antioxidant capacity correlated with SCFA production and with
the abundance of several bacterial taxa.