The human gut microbiota is known for its highly heterogeneous composition across different individuals. However, relatively little is known about functional differences in its ability to ferment complex polysaccharides. Through ex vivo measurements from healthy human donors, we show that individuals vary markedly in their microbial metabolic phenotypes (MMPs), mirroring differences in their microbiota composition, and resulting in the production of different quantities and proportions of Short Chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs) from the same inputs. We also show that aspects of these MMPs can be predicted from composition using 16S rRNA sequencing. From experiments performed using the same dietary fibers in vivo, we demonstrate that an ingested bol...
The human large intestine is colonized by a complex community, largely composed of strictly anaerob...
Bacterial metabolism plays a fundamental role in gut microbiota ecology and host-microbiome interact...
While a substantial amount of dietary fats escape absorption in the human small intestine and reach ...
The diet provides carbohydrates that are non-digestible in the upper gut and are major carbon and en...
Research characterising the gut microbiota in different populations and diseases has mushroomed sinc...
The human gut microbiota is a diverse and abundant community of microbes that colonize the gut. Thes...
ABSTRACT Production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), especially butyrate, in the gut microbiome i...
The gut microbiota contains approximately 1014 bacteria that live in a mutual symbiosis with their h...
Consumption of fermentable dietary fibers (DFs), which can induce growth and/or activity of specific...
Recent metagenomic studies have highlighted significant associations between dysregulation of the in...
The aim of this study was to screen how rapidly the human gut microbiota responds to diet in an in v...
Background With the emergence of metagenomic data, multiple links between the gut microbiome and the...
Evidence is accumulating that short chain fatty acids (SCFA) play an important role in the maintenan...
Knowledge of the functional roles and interspecies interactions are crucial for improving our unders...
The human large intestine is colonized by a complex community, largely composed of strictly anaerob...
Bacterial metabolism plays a fundamental role in gut microbiota ecology and host-microbiome interact...
While a substantial amount of dietary fats escape absorption in the human small intestine and reach ...
The diet provides carbohydrates that are non-digestible in the upper gut and are major carbon and en...
Research characterising the gut microbiota in different populations and diseases has mushroomed sinc...
The human gut microbiota is a diverse and abundant community of microbes that colonize the gut. Thes...
ABSTRACT Production of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), especially butyrate, in the gut microbiome i...
The gut microbiota contains approximately 1014 bacteria that live in a mutual symbiosis with their h...
Consumption of fermentable dietary fibers (DFs), which can induce growth and/or activity of specific...
Recent metagenomic studies have highlighted significant associations between dysregulation of the in...
The aim of this study was to screen how rapidly the human gut microbiota responds to diet in an in v...
Background With the emergence of metagenomic data, multiple links between the gut microbiome and the...
Evidence is accumulating that short chain fatty acids (SCFA) play an important role in the maintenan...
Knowledge of the functional roles and interspecies interactions are crucial for improving our unders...
The human large intestine is colonized by a complex community, largely composed of strictly anaerob...
Bacterial metabolism plays a fundamental role in gut microbiota ecology and host-microbiome interact...
While a substantial amount of dietary fats escape absorption in the human small intestine and reach ...