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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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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.
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EVOLUTION: Of Mice . . .

S. J. Simpson
- 24 Dec 2004 - 
References
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TL;DR: This first time that a dual host-symbiont transcriptome sequencing effort has been conducted in a single termite species demonstrates that phenoloxidase activities are prominent in the R. flavipes gut and are not symbiont derived, and expands the known number of host and symbionT glycosyl hydrolase families in Reticulitermes.
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Gastroprotective and blood pressure lowering effects of dietary nitrate are abolished by an antiseptic mouthwash

TL;DR: The results suggest that oral symbiotic bacteria modulate gastrointestinal and cardiovascular function via bioactivation of salivary nitrate via bioactivity of dietary nitrate through excessive use of antiseptic mouthwashes.
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Do symbiotic bacteria subvert host immunity

TL;DR: The role of immune suppression, subversion and evasion in the establishment of symbiotic host–bacterial associations is explored.
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Autism and Clostridium tetani

E.R. Bolte
- 01 Aug 1998 - 
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The role of gut hormones in the regulation of body weight and energy homeostasis.

TL;DR: The current knowledge regarding the mechanisms, sites of action and effects of the anorectic gut hormones peptide tyrosine-tyrosine (PYY), pancreatic polypeptide (PP), oxyntomodulin, and amylin and of the unique orexigenic hormone, ghrelin are summarized.
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