Coffee by-products: An underexplored source of prebiotic ingredients

Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr. 2023 Feb 27:1-20. doi: 10.1080/10408398.2023.2181761. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Consumers' demand for foods with high nutritional value and health benefits has fueled the development of prebiotic foods. In coffee industry, cherries transformation into roasted beans generates a large amount of waste/by-products (pulp/husks, mucilage, parchment, defective beans, silverskin and spent coffee grounds) that usually end up in landfills. The possibility to use coffee by-products as relevant sources of prebiotic ingredients is herein ascertained. As a prelude to this discussion, an overview of pertinent literature on prebiotic action was conducted, including on biotransformation of prebiotics, gut microbiota, and metabolites. Existing research indicates that coffee by-products contain significant levels of dietary fiber and other components that can improve gut health by stimulating beneficial bacteria in the colon, making them excellent candidates for prebiotic ingredients. Oligosaccharides from coffee by-products have lower digestibility than inulin and can be fermented by gut microbiota into functional metabolites, such as short-chain fatty acids. Depending on the concentration, melanoidins and chlorogenic acids may also have prebiotic action. Nevertheless, there is still a lack of in vivo studies to validate such findings in vitro. This review shows how coffee by-products can be interesting for the development of functional foods, contributing to sustainability, circular economy, food security, and health.

Keywords: Short-chain fatty acids; chlorogenic acids; melanoidins; oligosaccharides; probiotics.

Plain language summary

Coffee by-product oligosaccharides increase short-chain fatty acid levels.Melanoidins and chlorogenic acids promote the growth of lactobacillus and bifidobacteria.Coffee by-products show prebiotic potential, but further in vivo studies are required.