The health of mammals depends on a complex interplay with their microbial ecosystems. Compartments exposed to external environments such as the mucosal surfaces of the gastrointestinal tract accommodate the gut microbiota, composed by a wide range of bacteria. The gut microbiome confers benefits to the host, including expansion of metabolic potential and the development of an immune system that can robustly protect from external and internal insults. The cooperation between gut microbiome and host is enabled in part by the formation of partitioned niches that harbor diverse bacterial phyla. Bacterial secretion systems are commonly employed to manipulate the composition of these local environments. Here, we explore the roles of the bacterial...
The type VI secretion system (T6SS) is widely distributed in diverse bacterial species and habitats ...
The intestinal microbiota is a complex microbial community, with diverse and stable populations host...
Although we might shudder at the thought of billions of bacteria living in our lower intestine, we a...
Microbiota niches have space and/or nutrient restrictions, which has led to the coevolution of coope...
Bacteria inhabit all known ecological niches and establish interactions with organisms from all king...
Type VI secretion systems (T6SSs) deliver toxins into target cells and thus play a role in bacterial...
Over the last few decades humanity has experienced a series of tremendous technological advances, es...
SummaryBacteroidetes are a phylum of Gram-negative bacteria abundant in mammalian-associated polymic...
The gastrointestinal tract harbors a diverse microbiota that has coevolved with mammalian hosts. Tho...
Type VI Secretion Systems (T6SS) have been studied primarily in the context of pathogenic bacterial-...
All animals live in symbiosis. Shaped by eons of co-evolution, host bacterial associations have deve...
SummaryThe gastrointestinal tract harbors a diverse microbiota that has coevolved with mammalian hos...
The mammalian intestine is colonized by over a trillion microbes that comprise the “gut microbiota,”...
Type VI secretion systems (T6SS) have been studied primarily in the context of pathogenic bacteria-h...
Vertebrates have co-evolved with microorganisms resulting in a symbiotic relationship, which plays a...
The type VI secretion system (T6SS) is widely distributed in diverse bacterial species and habitats ...
The intestinal microbiota is a complex microbial community, with diverse and stable populations host...
Although we might shudder at the thought of billions of bacteria living in our lower intestine, we a...
Microbiota niches have space and/or nutrient restrictions, which has led to the coevolution of coope...
Bacteria inhabit all known ecological niches and establish interactions with organisms from all king...
Type VI secretion systems (T6SSs) deliver toxins into target cells and thus play a role in bacterial...
Over the last few decades humanity has experienced a series of tremendous technological advances, es...
SummaryBacteroidetes are a phylum of Gram-negative bacteria abundant in mammalian-associated polymic...
The gastrointestinal tract harbors a diverse microbiota that has coevolved with mammalian hosts. Tho...
Type VI Secretion Systems (T6SS) have been studied primarily in the context of pathogenic bacterial-...
All animals live in symbiosis. Shaped by eons of co-evolution, host bacterial associations have deve...
SummaryThe gastrointestinal tract harbors a diverse microbiota that has coevolved with mammalian hos...
The mammalian intestine is colonized by over a trillion microbes that comprise the “gut microbiota,”...
Type VI secretion systems (T6SS) have been studied primarily in the context of pathogenic bacteria-h...
Vertebrates have co-evolved with microorganisms resulting in a symbiotic relationship, which plays a...
The type VI secretion system (T6SS) is widely distributed in diverse bacterial species and habitats ...
The intestinal microbiota is a complex microbial community, with diverse and stable populations host...
Although we might shudder at the thought of billions of bacteria living in our lower intestine, we a...