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Metabolic networks of the human gut microbiota

Authors :
Rodney Joyette
Jasmine Deng
Hillary Hyland
Rebecca Rose Sandiford
Anastasia Jawaheer-Fenaoui
Karamat Mohammad
Susannah Selber-Hnatiw
Maxim Tremblay Potvin
Jessica Porras Marroquin
Nekoula Jean Alrumhein
Jermaine Jones
Andrew Habrich
Mischa Weissenberg
Rewaparsad Ramsarun
Paul-Arthur Plaisir
Shayesteh Kiani
Nabila Ibrahim
Chaim Jacob Goldman
Vanessa Gibbs
Lydia Rili
Anjali Patel
James Mendonca
Chiara Gamberi
Eugenie Samson
Emaly Ciubotaru
Jalal Al Rahbani
Samad Kaudeer
Rimsha Arshad
Aries John Rafal
Tania Iozzo
Abby Johanna Amy-Aminta Léna Kpata
Sharara Arezo Momtaz
Julia Jane Jaworski
Gabrielle Wilkinson
Jean-Daniel Azuelos
Fily Sidibe
Kelly Mathers
Elias Elahie
Dani Ni Wang
Allison White
Kathy Nguyen-Duong
Diana Diveeva
Nadir Guliyev
Megan Smith
Stefano Secondi
Sheyar Abdullah
Sara Martin
Natalie Beswick
Tavia Del Corpo
Daphney Bernadotte
Naomi Safir
Kelly McNamara
Kelsey Church
Briana Laura Di Giulio
Shawn Kelley
W Tse
Saro Aprikian
Sami Rhnima
Diala Alazar
Alina Maria Sreng Flores
Shannon Maingot
Kevin Gorjipour
Stephanie Shahid
Thiban Navaratnarajah
Katerina Zouboulakis
Anabel Suarez Ybarra
Lora D'Amato
Adam Trapid
Brittany Greco
James Gordon Marcel Frank
Niki Abdollahi
Mojdeh Shahroozi
Tarek Taifour
Marylin Koayes
Brittany Williams
Taylor Grant
Angela Ortiz
Rachel Goldberg-Hall
Angela Quach
Rebecca Sénéchal
Maneet Kaur Jhajj
Joshua Roth Wilson
Justin Wainberg
Fani-Fay Goltsios
Emma Furze
Kahlila Paul-Cole
Rebecca E. Garner
Ashlee D. Prévost
Tarin Sultana
Johanna Zoppi
Hana Chazbey
Lawrence Tang
Sean McCullogh
Mustafa Omran
Source :
Microbiology (Reading, England). 166(2)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The human gut microbiota controls factors that relate to human metabolism with a reach far greater than originally expected. Microbial communities and human (or animal) hosts entertain reciprocal exchanges between various inputs that are largely controlled by the host via its genetic make-up, nutrition and lifestyle. The composition of these microbial communities is fundamental to supply metabolic capabilities beyond those encoded in the host genome, and contributes to hormone and cellular signalling that support the dynamic adaptation to changes in food availability, environment and organismal development. Poor functional exchange between the microbial communities and their human host is associated with dysbiosis, metabolic dysfunction and disease. This review examines the biology of the dynamic relationship between the reciprocal metabolic state of the microbiota-host entity in balance with its environment (i.e. in healthy states), the enzymatic and metabolic changes associated with its imbalance in three well-studied diseases states such as obesity, diabetes and atherosclerosis, and the effects of bariatric surgery and exercise.

Details

ISSN :
14652080
Volume :
166
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Microbiology (Reading, England)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....444713c8301f6c66eb4424f1413ff12b