Session 3: Microbes and Nutrition

Friday, September 15, 1:30 – 3:00 p.m.
Beckman Room 1025 – Auditorium

Session chair: Sharon Donovan

Sharon Donovan

Diet and nutrition have a substantial influence on human health and wellbeing. The gut microbiome also plays a fundamental role in human health and diet is one of the most effective modulators of gut microbiota composition and metabolic function. This session will highlight: (1) how diet affects microbial colonization and host-microbe interactions in early life, and (2) how diet and fermented foods interact with the microbiome to influence metabolic and immune outcomes.

Suzanne Devkota
Suzanne Devkota
Sharon Donovan
Sharon Donovan
Hannah Holscher
Hannah Holscher
Jacob Allen
Jacob Allen

Presenters:

Compensatory actions of the gut microbiome during times of chronic nutritional stress
Suzanne Devkota, Cedars-Sinai Division of Gastroenterology

Factors influencing establishment of the microbiota in the first 1000 days of life – Implications for child outcomes
Sharon Donovan, Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition, University of Illinois

Diet, the gut microbiota, and metabolic health
Hannah Holscher, Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition, University of Illinois

Optimizing bioactive microbial metabolites in fermented food to support human immune function
Jacob Allen, Department of Kinesiology & Community Health, University of Illinois