26 results on '"Birchenough, George M. H."'
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2. Transglutaminase 3 crosslinks the secreted gel-forming mucus component Mucin-2 and stabilizes the colonic mucus layer
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3. Antenatal Ureaplasma Infection Causes Colonic Mucus Barrier Defects: Implications for Intestinal Pathologies
4. Gram-positive bacteria are held at a distance in the colon mucus by the lectin-like protein ZG16
5. A sentinel goblet cell guards the colonic crypt by triggering Nlrp6-dependent Muc2 secretion
6. An intercrypt subpopulation of goblet cells is essential for colonic mucus barrier function
7. The mucus and mucins of the goblet cells and enterocytes provide the first defense line of the gastrointestinal tract and interact with the immune system
8. Forming a mucus barrier along the colon
9. Obesity-associated microbiota contributes to mucus layer defects in genetically obese mice
10. Obesity-associated microbiota contributes to mucus layer defects in genetically obese mice
11. Loss of Trefoil Factor 2 Sensitizes Rat Pups to Systemic Infection with the Neonatal Pathogen Escherichia coli K1
12. The Nlrp6 inflammasome is not required for baseline colonic inner mucus layer formation or function
13. Bifidobacteria or Fiber Protects against Diet-Induced Microbiota-Mediated Colonic Mucus Deterioration
14. Bifidobacteria or fiber protects against diet-induced microbiota-mediated colonic mucus deterioration
15. Postnatal development of the small intestinal mucosa drives age-dependent, regio-selective susceptibility to Escherichia coli K1 infection
16. Gram-positive bacteria are held at a distance in the colon mucus by the lectin-like protein ZG16
17. The Goblet Cell Protein Clca1 (Alias mClca3 or Gob-5) Is Not Required for Intestinal Mucus Synthesis, Structure and Barrier Function in Naive or DSS-Challenged Mice
18. Non-Invasive Model of Neuropathogenic Escherichia coli Infection in the Neonatal Rat
19. Altered Innate Defenses in the Neonatal Gastrointestinal Tract in Response to Colonization by Neuropathogenic Escherichia coli
20. Cross-kingdom-mediated detection of intestinal protozoa through NLRP6.
21. Neonatal microbiota colonization drives maturation of primary and secondary goblet cell mediated protection in the pre-weaning colon.
22. Muc2-dependent microbial colonization of the jejunal mucus layer is diet sensitive and confers local resistance to enteric pathogen infection.
23. NOX1-dependent redox signaling potentiates colonic stem cell proliferation to adapt to the intestinal microbiota by linking EGFR and TLR activation.
24. The Nlrp6 inflammasome is not required for baseline colonic inner mucus layer formation or function.
25. Calcium-activated Chloride Channel Regulator 1 (CLCA1) Controls Mucus Expansion in Colon by Proteolytic Activity.
26. Bifidobacteria or Fiber Protects against Diet-Induced Microbiota-Mediated Colonic Mucus Deterioration.
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