Animals live in symbiosis with numerous microbe species. While some can protect hosts from infection and benefit host health, components of the microbiota or changes to the microbial landscape have the potential to facilitate infections and worsen disease severity. Pathogens and pathobionts can exploit microbiota metabolites, or can take advantage of a depletion in host defences and changing conditions within a host, to cause opportunistic infection. The microbiota might also favour a more virulent evolutionary trajectory for invading pathogens. In this review, we consider the ways in which a host microbiota contributes to infectious disease throughout the host’s life and potentially across evolutionary time. We further discuss the implicat...
The microbiota, and the genes that comprise its microbiome, play key roles in human health. Host-mic...
The evolution of host immunity occurs in the context of the microbiome, but little theory exists to ...
The discovery that microorganisms can be etiologic agents of disease has driven clinical, research a...
Animals live in symbiosis with numerous microbe species. While some can protect hosts from infection...
The microbiome has an important role in human health. Changes in the microbiota can confer resistanc...
This manuscript is the product of the graduate class BIOL890B: Host-Pathogen Interactions, which was...
International audienceIt is interesting to speculate that the evolutionary drive for microbes to dev...
Abstract. Major infectious diseases, such as viral hepatitis, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, a...
Symbiotic and pathogenic bacteria have in common that they live in or on host organisms or host cell...
Fungi are well-known decomposers of organic matter that thrive in virtually any environment on Earth...
Symbioses between animals and microbes are ubiquitous, and often have drastic fitness effects on bot...
The human intestinal microbiota plays a fundamental role in host health and is associated with many ...
This essay is written from the vantage point of the microbial world. While the focus of much thought...
The microbiota, and the genes that comprise its microbiome, play key roles in human health. Host-mic...
All animals live in symbiosis. Shaped by eons of co-evolution, host bacterial associations have deve...
The microbiota, and the genes that comprise its microbiome, play key roles in human health. Host-mic...
The evolution of host immunity occurs in the context of the microbiome, but little theory exists to ...
The discovery that microorganisms can be etiologic agents of disease has driven clinical, research a...
Animals live in symbiosis with numerous microbe species. While some can protect hosts from infection...
The microbiome has an important role in human health. Changes in the microbiota can confer resistanc...
This manuscript is the product of the graduate class BIOL890B: Host-Pathogen Interactions, which was...
International audienceIt is interesting to speculate that the evolutionary drive for microbes to dev...
Abstract. Major infectious diseases, such as viral hepatitis, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, a...
Symbiotic and pathogenic bacteria have in common that they live in or on host organisms or host cell...
Fungi are well-known decomposers of organic matter that thrive in virtually any environment on Earth...
Symbioses between animals and microbes are ubiquitous, and often have drastic fitness effects on bot...
The human intestinal microbiota plays a fundamental role in host health and is associated with many ...
This essay is written from the vantage point of the microbial world. While the focus of much thought...
The microbiota, and the genes that comprise its microbiome, play key roles in human health. Host-mic...
All animals live in symbiosis. Shaped by eons of co-evolution, host bacterial associations have deve...
The microbiota, and the genes that comprise its microbiome, play key roles in human health. Host-mic...
The evolution of host immunity occurs in the context of the microbiome, but little theory exists to ...
The discovery that microorganisms can be etiologic agents of disease has driven clinical, research a...