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    Article

    Getting a grip on things: how do communities of bacterial symbionts become established in our intestine?

    The gut contains our largest collection of resident microorganisms. One obvious question is how microbial communities establish and maintain themselves within a perfused intestine. The answers, which may come ...

    Justin L Sonnenburg, Largus T Angenent, Jeffrey I Gordon in Nature Immunology (2004)

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    Open Access

    Integrative analysis of the microbiome and metabolome of the human intestinal mucosal surface reveals exquisite inter-relationships

    Consistent compositional shifts in the gut microbiota are observed in IBD and other chronic intestinal disorders and may contribute to pathogenesis. The identities of microbial biomolecular mechanisms and meta...

    Ian H McHardy, Maryam Goudarzi, Maomeng Tong, Paul M Ruegger, Emma Schwager in Microbiome (2013)

  3. Article

    Reporting guidelines for human microbiome research: the STORMS checklist

    The particularly interdisciplinary nature of human microbiome research makes the organization and reporting of results spanning epidemiology, biology, bioinformatics, translational medicine and statistics a ch...

    Chloe Mirzayi, Audrey Renson, Fatima Zohra, Shaimaa Elsafoury in Nature Medicine (2021)