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Journal ArticleDOI

Gut Microbiota in Health and Disease

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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Journal ArticleDOI

Mind-altering microorganisms: the impact of the gut microbiota on brain and behaviour

TL;DR: The emerging concept of a microbiota–gut–brain axis suggests that modulation of the gut microbiota may be a tractable strategy for developing novel therapeutics for complex CNS disorders.
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The gut microbiota — masters of host development and physiology

TL;DR: The gut microbiota has a beneficial role during normal homeostasis, modulating the host's immune system as well as influencing host development and physiology, including organ development and morphogenesis, and host metabolism.
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Indigenous Bacteria from the Gut Microbiota Regulate Host Serotonin Biosynthesis

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that Indigenous spore-forming bacteria from the mouse and human microbiota promote 5-HT biosynthesis from colonic enterochromaffin cells (ECs), which supply 5- HT to the mucosa, lumen, and circulating platelets and elevating luminal concentrations of particular microbial metabolites increases colonic and blood5-HT in germ-free mice.
Journal ArticleDOI

EVOLUTION: Of Mice . . .

S. J. Simpson
- 24 Dec 2004 - 
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Metabonomic and microbiological analysis of the dynamic effect of vancomycin-induced gut microbiota modification in the mouse

TL;DR: Metabolic profiling, coupled with the metagenomic study of this antibiotic model, illustrates the close inter-relationship between the host and microbial "metabotypes", and will provide a basis for further experiments probing the understanding of the microbial-mammalian metabolic axis.
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Epithelial cells prime the immune response to an array of gut-derived commensals towards a tolerogenic phenotype through distinct actions of thymic stromal lymphopoietin and transforming growth factor-beta.

TL;DR: Novel crosstalk mechanisms between the human enterocyte cell line, Caco2, and underlying human monocyte‐derived DC in a transwell model where Gram‐positive (G+) commensals prevent Toll‐like receptor‐4 (TLR4)‐dependent Escherichia coli‐induced semimaturation in a TLR2‐dependent fashion are reported.
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Intestinal IgA: novel views on its function in the defence of the largest mucosal surface

TL;DR: The intestine is undoubtedly the most misunderstood and under-appreciated lymphoid organ in the body and in the eyes of mucosal immunologists, the gut exemplifies finely tuned, extensively interacting populations of cells and their products involved in innate and specific defence of the body’s largest surface area.
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Commensal microbiota is fundamental for the development of inflammatory pain

TL;DR: Results show that contact with commensal microbiota is necessary for mice to develop inflammatory hypernociception, and implicate an important role of the interaction between the commensAL microbiota and the host in favoring adaptation to environmental stresses, including those that cause pain.
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Association of germfree mice with bacteria isolated from normal mice

TL;DR: Coliform bacilli multiplied extensively and persisted at high levels in all parts of the gastrointestinal tract of germfree mice, even after these had become colonized with lactobacilli, anaerobic streptococci and bacteroides, but the coliform population fell precipitously within a few days after the animals were fed the intestinal contents of healthy pathogen-free mice.
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