The human body is colonized by at least the same number of microbial cells as it is composed of human cells, and most of these microorganisms are located in the gut. Though the interplay between the gut microbiome and the host has been extensively studied, how the gut microbiome interacts with the enteric nervous system remains largely unknown. To date, a physiologically representative in vitro model to study gut microbiome-nervous system interactions does not exist.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe human gut microbiome is crucial for human health and disease but exhibits extensive individual-level strain variation. Distinct strains encode and express different functions. The resulting emergent properties therefore differentially affect human health and disease in a personalized manner.
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