Absence of intestinal microbiota does not protect mice from diet-induced obesity.
about
Gut microbiota and metabolic syndromeAntibiotics in early life alter the murine colonic microbiome and adiposityThe Microbiome and Mental Health: Looking Back, Moving Forward with Lessons from Allergic DiseasesThe Intestinal Microbiota in Metabolic DiseasePathophysiological role of host microbiota in the development of obesityGrowing up in a Bubble: Using Germ-Free Animals to Assess the Influence of the Gut Microbiota on Brain and BehaviorLuminal Conversion and Immunoregulation by ProbioticsObesity as a consequence of gut bacteria and diet interactionsModulation of the gut microbiota by nutrients with prebiotic properties: consequences for host health in the context of obesity and metabolic syndromeDo interactions between gut ecology and environmental chemicals contribute to obesity and diabetes?Age and microenvironment outweigh genetic influence on the Zucker rat microbiomeIntronic cis-regulatory modules mediate tissue-specific and microbial control of angptl4/fiaf transcriptionGut Microbiota: A Contributing Factor to ObesityRole of Gut Microbiota in the Aetiology of Obesity: Proposed Mechanisms and Review of the LiteratureThe infant gut microbiome: evidence for obesity risk and dietary interventionGut microbiota, intestinal permeability, obesity-induced inflammation, and liver injuryAngiopoietin-like 4: a decade of researchAngiopoietin-like protein 4: health effects, modulating agents and structure-function relationshipsANGPTL4 is produced by entero-endocrine cells in the human intestinal tractIncreased oral detection, but decreased intestinal signaling for fats in mice lacking gut microbiotaBacteroides uniformis CECT 7771 ameliorates metabolic and immunological dysfunction in mice with high-fat-diet induced obesityComparative metagenomics of biogas-producing microbial communities from production-scale biogas plants operating under wet or dry fermentation conditionsCausality of small and large intestinal microbiota in weight regulation and insulin resistanceGut Microbiota Modulation and Its Relationship with Obesity Using Prebiotic Fibers and Probiotics: A ReviewThe Gut Microbiome Is Altered in a Letrozole-Induced Mouse Model of Polycystic Ovary Syndrome.Gut microbioma population: an indicator really sensible to any change in age, diet, metabolic syndrome, and life-style.Gut microbiome analysis of type 2 diabetic patients from the Chinese minority ethnic groups the Uygurs and Kazaks.Effect of Dietary l-arabinose on the Intestinal Microbiota and Metabolism of Dietary Daidzein in Adult Mice.Polydextrose changes the gut microbiome and attenuates fasting triglyceride and cholesterol levels in Western diet fed mice.Bidirectional communication between the Aryl hydrocarbon Receptor (AhR) and the microbiome tunes host metabolism.Prebiotic effects of wheat arabinoxylan related to the increase in bifidobacteria, Roseburia and Bacteroides/Prevotella in diet-induced obese mice.The first 1000 cultured species of the human gastrointestinal microbiota.Differential modulation by Akkermansia muciniphila and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii of host peripheral lipid metabolism and histone acetylation in mouse gut organoids.Fibre digestibility, abundance of faecal bacteria and plasma acetate concentrations in overweight adult mares.High-throughput sequence-based analysis of the intestinal microbiota of weanling pigs fed genetically modified MON810 maize expressing Bacillus thuringiensis Cry1Ab (Bt maize) for 31 days.The relationship between gut microbiota and weight gain in humans.Acetatifactor muris gen. nov., sp. nov., a novel bacterium isolated from the intestine of an obese mouse.Propensity to high-fat diet-induced obesity in mice is associated with the indigenous opportunistic bacteria on the interior of Peyer's patches.Human intestinal lumen and mucosa-associated microbiota in patients with colorectal cancer.Clostridium ramosum promotes high-fat diet-induced obesity in gnotobiotic mouse models.
P2860
Q24563886-9DE40E7D-4441-468B-8D23-8A5148E0D511Q24630877-6B840008-D044-4024-8248-6E30679C36D1Q26749332-EBC5DB00-9320-4A8F-B7BE-E3BBFFB32EEFQ26750612-BEDDD0A7-F401-4826-8BF2-7A7C63FFFBADQ26750893-6663DE41-9886-4998-AB02-D6F73F03C303Q26766519-9A1CAD2C-8487-4911-8289-B3826F9E726EQ26776185-DC19FE6A-B6E2-4BB9-8B45-5E3CF1BF815EQ27001257-3717FB60-0BCA-4B2B-A784-B6681E822613Q27006454-BA2F93BC-0C0F-4D31-BFE2-171C18F53E46Q27010006-18AD97CC-7D35-4044-925C-62FFA0D7AE58Q27321491-A96B9410-55FE-4AA4-8BC6-005C1950AC82Q27334496-442D3D2D-8583-437B-BB87-2A34A902464DQ28066301-C2DB4BC4-EC1F-4641-BDC5-6FB098422DE3Q28079131-F1CD2DF6-C3C5-4491-9F3D-F2B51BF77387Q28084387-F75870F5-D4D9-4B6E-A50C-E1BBBF4CE384Q28244656-D0173BD7-F64D-4D22-840C-32E3C8DCE2F3Q28263089-8D78EF53-7AB9-43F0-A888-8F8419971E52Q28263229-ECE478BB-BE06-4EBB-8B01-0688E8F3DA7BQ28300566-131ECCBD-C33E-49C1-8BEC-D174D73A119CQ28480933-15F2CBF3-3313-478F-8228-3D1E7C4C26B8Q28481575-951DF3A1-9B8E-47AD-B581-AA98449CF029Q28649887-E6CF17DF-6F90-429D-8030-E24EE0950923Q28828501-051C6684-727B-416A-B6DA-4F4A1DFEA06BQ30234753-44DB1659-5242-424E-87E7-C5975A3751BCQ30361539-41E281C1-17E6-4E07-8F4F-048AED914EF0Q30364423-87028DB5-60A1-4E4A-9E45-A79DE85EE30CQ30400204-E530B322-0564-4A3D-B7DF-46EA54A9D213Q33665927-671D95ED-C8E2-4407-B573-43C4AC306CAAQ33903113-BB876DAC-88B5-49CC-ADFB-E83082A12FEAQ33914895-86E93787-39ED-4AF0-BCF2-6354FED6E101Q33939768-9FF298D9-64A3-4ECD-8E7C-AA63211EA413Q34041082-4BBFE7BC-51F5-46C1-9132-C629A0362EB2Q34093446-AF554CA2-5A69-4408-8D11-0BD207464908Q34127269-42BDB590-1BD1-4F62-8331-A5DE72A8398DQ34216553-F4508AB9-97B8-4BD6-BF6A-4585F5AD5625Q34242302-50BC320E-C193-4280-8B77-C5193BFF06DCQ34278665-22BB5203-25FD-4CCD-8AC1-9B0C10084FB4Q34292401-3B27FF77-8908-4E7E-98B4-6437E0309FEBQ34326478-7D833623-8389-4629-824D-39CB22765F90Q34334686-29AAEB43-F844-437B-BB8F-93D880FD62BB
P2860
Absence of intestinal microbiota does not protect mice from diet-induced obesity.
description
2010 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2010年の論文
@ja
2010年学术文章
@wuu
2010年学术文章
@zh
2010年学术文章
@zh-cn
2010年学术文章
@zh-hans
2010年学术文章
@zh-my
2010年学术文章
@zh-sg
2010年學術文章
@yue
2010年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Absence of intestinal microbiota does not protect mice from diet-induced obesity.
@en
Absence of intestinal microbiota does not protect mice from diet-induced obesity.
@nl
type
label
Absence of intestinal microbiota does not protect mice from diet-induced obesity.
@en
Absence of intestinal microbiota does not protect mice from diet-induced obesity.
@nl
prefLabel
Absence of intestinal microbiota does not protect mice from diet-induced obesity.
@en
Absence of intestinal microbiota does not protect mice from diet-induced obesity.
@nl
P2093
P1476
Absence of intestinal microbiota does not protect mice from diet-induced obesity.
@en
P2093
Christine K Fleissner
Gunnar Loh
Mohamed Mostafa Abd El-Bary
Nora Huebel
P304
P356
10.1017/S0007114510001303
P577
2010-05-05T00:00:00Z