The human gut microbiome provides us with functional features that we did not have to evolve ourselves and can be viewed as a structured microbial community that operates like a microbial organ within the human host. A minor but important part of this microbiome is the ability to colonise and thrive within the mucous layer that covers the colon epithelium. These mucosal microbes intimately interact with the intestinal tissue and seem to be important modulators of human health. Embedded in the host-secreted mucous matrix, they form a 'mucosal biofilm' with a distinct composition and functionality. In this review, we provide evidence that six specific (micro) environmental factors near the colon mucosa shape and determine mucosal biofilm form...
Mammals coexist with an extremely dense microbiota in the lower intestine. Despite the constant chal...
Complex and highly variable site-dependent bacterial ecosystems exist throughout the length of the h...
We are surrounded and colonized, from the inside out, by microbes since birth. Most of the bacterial...
The human gut microbiome provides us with functional features that we did not have to evolve ourselv...
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licen...
A close symbiotic relationship exists between the intestinal microbiota and its host. A critical com...
To avoid detrimental interactions with intestinal microbes, the human epithelium is covered with a p...
High individuality, large complexity and limited understanding of the mechanisms underlying human in...
Microbial biofilms were first described in 1936 and subsequent research has unveiled their ubiquity ...
The intestinal tract is inhabited by a tremendous number of microorganisms, termed the gut microbiot...
Mechanisms whereby the gut mucosa tolerates commensal bacteria and food antigens without developing ...
SummaryThe intestinal mucus layer provides a barrier limiting bacterial contact with the underlying ...
The microbiome plays an important role in maintaining human health. Despite multiple factors being a...
The gastrointestinal tract is a highly complex organ in which multiple dynamic physiological process...
The gastrointestinal (GI) mucus layer is a protective and lubricating hydrogel of polymer-forming gl...
Mammals coexist with an extremely dense microbiota in the lower intestine. Despite the constant chal...
Complex and highly variable site-dependent bacterial ecosystems exist throughout the length of the h...
We are surrounded and colonized, from the inside out, by microbes since birth. Most of the bacterial...
The human gut microbiome provides us with functional features that we did not have to evolve ourselv...
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licen...
A close symbiotic relationship exists between the intestinal microbiota and its host. A critical com...
To avoid detrimental interactions with intestinal microbes, the human epithelium is covered with a p...
High individuality, large complexity and limited understanding of the mechanisms underlying human in...
Microbial biofilms were first described in 1936 and subsequent research has unveiled their ubiquity ...
The intestinal tract is inhabited by a tremendous number of microorganisms, termed the gut microbiot...
Mechanisms whereby the gut mucosa tolerates commensal bacteria and food antigens without developing ...
SummaryThe intestinal mucus layer provides a barrier limiting bacterial contact with the underlying ...
The microbiome plays an important role in maintaining human health. Despite multiple factors being a...
The gastrointestinal tract is a highly complex organ in which multiple dynamic physiological process...
The gastrointestinal (GI) mucus layer is a protective and lubricating hydrogel of polymer-forming gl...
Mammals coexist with an extremely dense microbiota in the lower intestine. Despite the constant chal...
Complex and highly variable site-dependent bacterial ecosystems exist throughout the length of the h...
We are surrounded and colonized, from the inside out, by microbes since birth. Most of the bacterial...