Your diet could be having an even greater impact on your health than you realize. Dr. Steve Lindemann believes we can learn a lot more from our gut microbiome. His current research, in partnership with Purdue's Whistler Center for Carbohydrate Research, is to find out more about how our dietary influences shape the gut microbiome and its effects on our overall health. "We know that what we eat controls which microbes live inside our guts," said Lindemann. "We don't yet know what food compounds or variables are most important and influencing the gut microbiome. We don't know the rules for why gut microbes rise and fall in abundance over time. That's what we're trying to figure out so we can predict how what we eat will affect the gut microbiome. The cause and effect is important not just for our digestive health, but also for our immune system and our neural and cardiovascular health." Lindemann is using molecular microbial ecology techniques to understand:
Drugs like Ozempic and Mounjaro have made regular headlines in recent years for their ability to...
Scientists have long known that fiber feeds beneficial bacteria in the human gut. Now, Purdue...
Americans generally consume about half the recommended daily dietary fiber requirement. These...
Dr. Steve Lindemann was named the Philip E. Nelson Endowed Chair of Food Science.
Congratulations to Dr. Bruce Hamaker on his new patent for Novel Low pH, Low Sugar Gel-forming...
Steve Lindemann has been named the recipient of the Young Scientist Research Award