What is it about?
Everyone possesses a gut microbiome: our gut is filled with trillions of bacteria that perform useful processes that help us live health lives. When we were born, though, our gut microbiome was empty! Our paper helps explain how, over time, our microbiome acquired the bacteria that exist in it today.
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Why is it important?
In the last 20 years scientists have shown that the gut microbiome affects human health. Microbial therapies, like fecal microbiota transplantation and probiotics, seek to deliberately and beneficially modify a person's gut microbiome. The process of acquiring new foreign microbes from a particular microbial therapy is quite similar to the experimental setup we examine in this paper, in which germ-free flies are fed known bacterial species. Therefore, the insights gained from our research could translate to improving the construction and administration of microbial therapies.
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This page is a summary of: Stochastic microbiome assembly depends on context, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, February 2022, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2115877119.
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