
For your vaginal & gut microbiome
ProViotics (L. plantarum GLP3)
Daye’s ProViotics contain Lactobacillus plantarum GLP3 which is a lactic-acid producing bacterium naturally found in the human microbiome. It was selected for its stability, pH resilience, and verified growth in simulated vaginal conditions - allowing a targeted and predictable response.
Cultivated in carrot juice rather than dairy, it’s vegan, additive-free, and environmentally lighter to produce.
Multi-strain ≠ multi-benefit:
5 billion live good bacteria
Boost the beneficial bacteria in your vaginal and gut microbiome
Scientifically tested
Confirmed to survive your gut and vaginal acidity

Freeze-dried
Freeze-drying preserves the good bacteria, ensuring they survive in the gut
Vegan
Vegan and free from soy, dairy, gluten, allergens, additives and preservatives
How it works
When taken orally, GLP3 first colonises the gut, then can migrate through the recto-vaginal corridor to reach the vagina - a natural route known as bacterial translocation. This pathway links gut and vaginal microbiomes through shared immune and hormonal signals.
1
Competitive exclusion
GLP3 adheres to epithelial cells, blocking pathogen attachment sites.
2
pH regulation
Produces lactic acid, maintaining a mildly acidic vaginal environment (pH 3.8–4.5).
3
Antimicrobial peptides
Releases bacteriocins and biosurfactants that inhibit unwanted species.
4
Immune modulation
In vitro studies suggest Lactobacillus plantarum may regulate cytokines such as IL-8, supporting local immune balance.
Why this matters?

Soy-tested

Dairy-tested

Gluten-tested

Corn-tested

No preservatives

Freeze dried
Evidence snapshots
Regulatory & Quality
- GRAS & QPS-recognised species under EFSA & FDA frameworks
- Antibiotic-sensitive, eliminating risk of resistance transfer
- Vegan, allergen-free, additive-free tablets — only live bacteria and natural excipients
- Produced under GMP & ISO 13485-compliant conditions
- Sustainably cultivated in carrot-juice medium
Beyond vaginal health: the body’s ecosystem
Gut microbes influence estrogen metabolism via enzymes such as β-glucuronidase, which affects vaginal glycogen and pH. Meanwhile, hormonal shifts reshape microbial balance showing why gut, hormones, and vagina function as one system.



