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Journal ArticleDOI

Gut Microbiota in Health and Disease

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TLDR
The advances in modeling and analysis of gut microbiota will further the authors' knowledge of their role in health and disease, allowing customization of existing and future therapeutic and prophylactic modalities.
Abstract
Gut microbiota is an assortment of microorganisms inhabiting the length and width of the mammalian gastrointestinal tract. The composition of this microbial community is host specific, evolving throughout an individual's lifetime and susceptible to both exogenous and endogenous modifications. Recent renewed interest in the structure and function of this "organ" has illuminated its central position in health and disease. The microbiota is intimately involved in numerous aspects of normal host physiology, from nutritional status to behavior and stress response. Additionally, they can be a central or a contributing cause of many diseases, affecting both near and far organ systems. The overall balance in the composition of the gut microbial community, as well as the presence or absence of key species capable of effecting specific responses, is important in ensuring homeostasis or lack thereof at the intestinal mucosa and beyond. The mechanisms through which microbiota exerts its beneficial or detrimental influences remain largely undefined, but include elaboration of signaling molecules and recognition of bacterial epitopes by both intestinal epithelial and mucosal immune cells. The advances in modeling and analysis of gut microbiota will further our knowledge of their role in health and disease, allowing customization of existing and future therapeutic and prophylactic modalities.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Neutrophil Elastase Alters the Murine Gut Microbiota Resulting in Enhanced Salmonella Colonization

TL;DR: It is shown that Salmonella infection in mice causes recruitment of neutrophils to the gut lumen, resulting in significant changes in the composition of the intestinal microbiota, and a new relationship between the microbiota and the host during infection is revealed.
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Human Microbiome: When a Friend Becomes an Enemy

TL;DR: Some initial insight is given on the studies of the microbiome and its connection with human health to allow for a deeper understanding of human disease states and help to elucidate a possible association between the composition of the microbiota and certain pathologies.
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Enterococcus faecalis readily colonizes the entire gastrointestinal tract and forms biofilms in a germ-free mouse model

TL;DR: This work examines the initial colonization of the germ-free murine GI tract by Enterococcus faecalis—one of the first bacterial colonizers of the naïve mammalian gut and demonstrates strong morphological similarities to previous in vitro E. Faecalis biofilm microcolony architecture.
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Regulation of Sirtuin-Mediated Protein Deacetylation by Cardioprotective Phytochemicals

TL;DR: In this article, a review of the evidence from the bench to the clinical setting for the potential cardioprotective roles of various phytochemicals in the modulation of sirtuin-mediated deacetylation is presented.
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Role of Microbiota and Innate Immunity in Recurrent Clostridium difficile Infection

TL;DR: How the intestinal microbiota modifications and the modulation of innate immune response can lead to and exacerbate Clostridium difficile infection is discussed.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An obesity-associated gut microbiome with increased capacity for energy harvest

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Microbial ecology: Human gut microbes associated with obesity

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A core gut microbiome in obese and lean twins

TL;DR: The faecal microbial communities of adult female monozygotic and dizygotic twin pairs concordant for leanness or obesity, and their mothers are characterized to address how host genotype, environmental exposure and host adiposity influence the gut microbiome.
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