Publication | Closed Access
A Model of Host-Microbial Interactions in an Open Mammalian Ecosystem
618
Citations
16
References
1996
Year
DysbiosisEngineeringHost-microbe InteractionsDigestive TractSynthetic EcologyGut MicrobiologyMicrobial EcologyMicrobial InteractionsEnvironmental MicrobiologyIntestinal MicrobiotaHost-pathogen InteractionsIsogenic StrainEcosystem InteractionOpen Mammalian EcosystemHost-microbe InteractionMicrobiomeTransposon InsertionBiologyMicrobiologyGut BarrierSymbiosisMedicineMammalian Intestine
The maintenance and significance of the complex populations of microbes present in the mammalian intestine are poorly understood. Comparison of conventionally housed and germ-free NMRI mice revealed that production of fucosylated glycoconjugates and an alpha1, 2-fucosyltransferase messenger RNA in the small-intestinal epithelium requires the normal microflora. Colonization of germ-free mice with Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, a component of this flora, restored the fucosylation program, whereas an isogenic strain carrying a transposon insertion that disrupts its ability to use L-fucose as a carbon source did not. Simplified models such as this should aid the study of open microbial ecosystems.
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