Next Generation Probiotics for Neutralizing Obesogenic Effects: Taxa Culturing Searching Strategies López Moreno, Ana Acuña Morales, Inmaculada Torres Sánchez, Alfonso Ruiz Moreno, Ángel Cerk, Klara Rivas Velasco, Ana María Suárez García, Antonio Francisco Monteoliva Sánchez, Mercedes Aguilera Gómez, Margarita Next-generation probiotics Culturing Dietary obesogens exposure Obesity Endocrine pathogenesis Endobolome This work was carried out within the frame of GP/EFSA/ENCO/380 2018/03/G04: OBEMIRISK: Knowledge platform for assessing the risk of Bisphenols on gut microbiota and its role in obesogenic phenotype: looking for biomarkers. This research was also funded by FEDER-Infrastructure: IE_2019-198. A.L-M Incentivacion de la Investigacion. Plan Propio-UGR. K. Cerk is collaborating with UGR under the EU-FORA Programme (2020/2021). The combination of diet, lifestyle, and the exposure to food obesogens categorized into "microbiota disrupting chemicals" (MDC) could determine obesogenic-related dysbiosis and modify the microbiota diversity that impacts on individual health-disease balances, inducing altered pathogenesis phenotypes. Specific, complementary, and combined treatments are needed to face these altered microbial patterns and the specific misbalances triggered. In this sense, searching for next-generation beneficial microbes or next-generation probiotics (NGP) by microbiota culturing, and focusing on their demonstrated, extensive scope and well-defined functions could contribute to counteracting and repairing the effects of obesogens. Therefore, this review presents a perspective through compiling information and key strategies for directed searching and culturing of NGP that could be administered for obesity and endocrine-related dysbiosis by (i) observing the differential abundance of specific microbiota taxa in obesity-related patients and analyzing their functional roles, (ii) developing microbiota-directed strategies for culturing these taxa groups, and (iii) applying the successful compiled criteria from recent NGP clinical studies. New isolated or cultivable microorganisms from healthy gut microbiota specifically related to obesogens' neutralization effects might be used as an NGP single strain or in consortia, both presenting functions and the ability to palliate metabolic-related disorders. Identification of holistic approaches for searching and using potential NGP, key aspects, the bias, gaps, and proposals of solutions are also considered in this review. 2021-07-13T10:08:37Z 2021-07-13T10:08:37Z 2021-05-12 info:eu-repo/semantics/article López-Moreno, A... [et al.]. Next Generation Probiotics for Neutralizing Obesogenic Effects: Taxa Culturing Searching Strategies. Nutrients 2021, 13, 1617. [https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13051617] http://hdl.handle.net/10481/69665 10.3390/nu13051617 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Atribución 3.0 España MDPI