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Gut microbiota: Role in pathogen colonization, immune responses, and inflammatory disease.

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TLDR
Understanding the interaction of the microbiota with pathogens and the immune system will provide critical insight into the pathogenesis of disease and the development of strategies to prevent and treat inflammatory disease.
Abstract
The intestinal tract of mammals is colonized by a large number of microorganisms including trillions of bacteria that are referred to collectively as the gut microbiota. These indigenous microorganisms have co-evolved with the host in a symbiotic relationship. In addition to metabolic benefits, symbiotic bacteria provide the host with several functions that promote immune homeostasis, immune responses, and protection against pathogen colonization. The ability of symbiotic bacteria to inhibit pathogen colonization is mediated via several mechanisms including direct killing, competition for limited nutrients, and enhancement of immune responses. Pathogens have evolved strategies to promote their replication in the presence of the gut microbiota. Perturbation of the gut microbiota structure by environmental and genetic factors increases the risk of pathogen infection, promotes the overgrowth of harmful pathobionts, and the development of inflammatory disease. Understanding the interaction of the microbiota with pathogens and the immune system will provide critical insight into the pathogenesis of disease and the development of strategies to prevent and treat inflammatory disease.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The microbiome and cancer.

TL;DR: Next‐generation sequencing technology has permitted a thorough exploration of microbiomes such as that of the human gut, enabling observation of taxonomic and metabolomic relationships between the microbiome and cancer.
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Oral microbiomes: more and more importance in oral cavity and whole body

TL;DR: Oral microbiomes play an important role in the human microbial community and human health, and the use of recently developed molecular methods has greatly expanded the knowledge of the composition and function of the oral microbiome in health and disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cytokine Networks in the Pathophysiology of Inflammatory Bowel Disease.

TL;DR: The progression of IBD from the perspective of remodeling of cytokine networks is discussed, placing well-established and under-studied cytokine modules in the context of cellular interactions, their dynamic regulation in late stages of disease and their current and potential use in the clinic.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Eating for two: how metabolism establishes interspecies interactions in the gut

TL;DR: This work travels down a carbohydrate catabolic pathway common to many species of Bacteroides, highlighting the interspecies interactions established (often inevitably) at its key steps and discusses the metabolic considerations in maintaining the stability of host-associated microbial communities.
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Healthy human gut phageome

TL;DR: A healthy gut phageome (HGP) was discovered, and it is found that the HGP is significantly decreased in individuals with gastrointestinal disease (ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease), revealing a large community of human gut bacteriophages that likely contribute to maintaining human health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enteric Salmonellosis Disrupts the Microbial Ecology of the Murine Gastrointestinal Tract

TL;DR: The data suggest that several Salmonella virulence factors, particularly those involved in the local mucosal host response, are required for disruption of the intestinal ecosystem.
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