Publications by authors named "Matheus D Notter"

Article Synopsis
  • Root exudates play a crucial role in influencing the plant's root microbiome through specialized metabolites, particularly benzoxazinoids in maize.
  • Researchers discovered that certain bacteria in the maize rhizosphere can metabolize these compounds, specifically MBOA (6-methoxybenzoxazolin-2(3H)-one), into AMPO (2-amino-7-methoxy-phenoxazin-3-one).
  • A gene cluster containing bxdA, which encodes a key enzyme for this conversion, was identified, highlighting how specific bacteria able to metabolize benzoxazinoids can thrive and influence the soil environment around maize roots.
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Bile acids, which are synthesized from cholesterol by the liver, are chemically transformed along the intestinal tract by the gut microbiota, and the products of these transformations signal through host receptors, affecting overall host health. These transformations include bile acid deconjugation, oxidation, and 7α-dehydroxylation. An understanding of the biogeography of bile acid transformations in the gut is critical because deconjugation is a prerequisite for 7α-dehydroxylation and because most gut microorganisms harbor bile acid transformation capacity.

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There is the notion that infection with a virulent intestinal pathogen induces generally stronger mucosal adaptive immunity than the exposure to an avirulent strain. Whether the associated mucosal inflammation is important or redundant for effective induction of immunity is, however, still unclear. Here we use a model of auxotrophic Salmonella infection in germ-free mice to show that live bacterial virulence factor-driven immunogenicity can be uncoupled from inflammatory pathogenicity.

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