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Host-bacterial mutualism in the human intestine

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 307, Issue 5717, Pages 1915-1920

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1104816

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The distal human intestine represents an anaerobic bioreactor programmed with an enormous population of bacteria, dominated by relatively few divisions that are highly diverse at the strain/subspecies level. This microbiota and its collective genomes (microbiome) provide us with genetic and metabolic attributes we have not been required to evolve on our own, including the ability to harvest otherwise inaccessible nutrients. New studies are revealing how the gut microbiota has co-evolved with us and how it manipulates and complements our biology in ways that are mutually beneficial. We are also starting to understand how certain keystone members of the microbiota operate to maintain the stability and functional adaptability of this microbial organ.

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