Fermentation technologies to produce and improve alternative protein sources
Author
Publication date
2025-12-31ISSN
2304-8158
Abstract
The growing global population, along with evolving dietary trends and increasing concerns about health and the environment, underscores the urgent need to transform current food systems to minimize their environmental footprint and enhance global food security. This transformation has driven the development and demand for alternative food sources. In this context, alternative proteins emerge as promising options due to their production from plants, microorganisms, and insects, which potentially reduces the environmental impact of food production while supporting global food security. Nevertheless, the transition toward alternative proteins presents significant challenges related to the presence of antinutritional compounds, poor amino acid composition, lower digestibility, and undesirable organoleptic characteristics. Moreover, these new generations of alternative foods are highly processed, raising concerns about their nutritional adequacy compared to traditional products. In this context, fermentation technologies have emerged as promising tools to overcome these limitations. Traditional fermentation can degrade antinutritional factors, improve digestibility, and release bioactive compounds, allowing the production of new products with health-promoting properties. Beyond traditional fermentation, biomass fermentation to single-cell protein or microbial protein production represents a sustainable alternative, promoting a climate-friendly approach aligned with circular bioeconomy principles by upcycling various agro-industrial streams. Thus, this review discusses how microbial strategies (from traditional fermentation to cutting-edge microbial protein production) can enhance the nutritional properties of alternative protein-based foods. Emphasis is placed on the capacity of traditional fermentation to improve nutritional quality and bioactivity, mitigate undesirable sensory traits, and preserve or enhance micronutrient content. Additionally, integrating biomass fermentation and emerging precision fermentation positions microorganisms as valuable contributors to more nutritious and sustainable food systems.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
663/664 - Food and nutrition. Enology. Oils. Fat
Pages
34
Publisher
MDPI
Is part of
Foods
Grant agreement number
MICINN/Programa Estatal para impulsar la investigación científico-técnica y su transferencia/PID2022-137090OR-I00/ES/Análogos cárnicos seguros elaborados con proteína alternativa/SafeMAAP
FEDER/ / /EU/ /
FSE+/ / /EU/ /
Program
Funcionalitat i Seguretat Alimentària
Qualitat i Tecnologia Alimentària
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This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- ARTICLES CIENTÍFICS [3577]
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/


