2016
DOI: 10.1038/nature18845
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A microbial perspective of human developmental biology

Abstract: Preface Most people think of human development only in terms of ‘human’ cells and organs. Here, we discuss another facet involving human-associated microbial communities. A microbial perspective of human development provides opportunities to refine our definitions of healthy pre- and postnatal growth and to develop new strategies for disease prevention and treatment. Considering the dramatic changes in lifestyles and disease patterns that are occurring with globalization, we issue a call for human microbial ob… Show more

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Cited by 219 publications
(155 citation statements)
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“…longum and B. breve 46,47 , the ecological context (that is, infants versus adults) might dictate whether these HMOs are indeed pre biotic. Moreover, having structural equivalence to specific HMOs does not infer functional equiva lence to the con stellation of HMOs in milk 48 . Thus, for now, it is acceptable to state that some HMOs are candidate prebiotics.…”
Section: Box 2 | Justification For the New Definition Of Prebioticsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…longum and B. breve 46,47 , the ecological context (that is, infants versus adults) might dictate whether these HMOs are indeed pre biotic. Moreover, having structural equivalence to specific HMOs does not infer functional equiva lence to the con stellation of HMOs in milk 48 . Thus, for now, it is acceptable to state that some HMOs are candidate prebiotics.…”
Section: Box 2 | Justification For the New Definition Of Prebioticsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In fact, in a recent publication in the journal Nature, researchers called for a broad microbial perspective on healthy human development and emphasized the fact that we need microbes for normal microbial communities as part of a healthy existence (Charbonneau et al 2016). Microbial exposures during development are part of our necessary physiological/immunological maturation.…”
Section: Embracing Colonization Resistancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Extrinsic factors, including host genetic makeup [6], cohousing/family members [7], oral antibiotic use early in life [8] and diet [9] are dominating factors in shaping the intestinal microbiota. Whether these early life events are determinants of microbiota-related disease in later life remains to be established.…”
Section: Bbbmentioning
confidence: 99%