2018
DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2018.01168
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Paradigms of Lung Microbiota Functions in Health and Disease, Particularly, in Asthma

Abstract: Improvements in our knowledge of the gut microbiota have broadened our vision of the microbes associated with the intestine. These microbes are essential actors and protectors of digestive and extra-digestive health and, by extension, crucial for human physiology. Similar reconsiderations are currently underway concerning the endogenous microbes of the lungs, with a shift in focus away from their involvement in infections toward a role in physiology. The discovery of the lung microbiota was delayed by the long… Show more

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Cited by 177 publications
(155 citation statements)
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“…54 In humans, it is not feasible to track the lower airway microbiome longitudinally, however, the constituents of the microbiome associated with distinct steps of immune maturation indicative of ongoing crosstalk between the airway resident microbes and immune cells. 56,57…”
Section: The Gut Microbiotamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…54 In humans, it is not feasible to track the lower airway microbiome longitudinally, however, the constituents of the microbiome associated with distinct steps of immune maturation indicative of ongoing crosstalk between the airway resident microbes and immune cells. 56,57…”
Section: The Gut Microbiotamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…14,23 Microbial elimination is an active process that is achieved through mucociliary clearance, cough and host immune defences. 24 The environmental conditions necessary for microbial growth within the respiratory tract (e.g. pH, temperature, nutrient availability, oxygen tension and activation of host inflammatory cells) are heterogenous, and considerable regional variation can be observed in a single healthy lung.…”
Section: The Lung Microbiota In Health and Diseasementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The microbial community is continually renewed and replaced, but the majority of microbes involved in these processes belongs to four phyla: Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, Proteobacteria, and Actinobacteria. In healthy humans, Prevotella, Streptococcus, Veilonella, Neisseria, Haemophilus, and Fusobacterium are the most abundant genera in the lungs [2][3][4].…”
Section: Lung Microbiota: Development and Composition In Healthy Lungsmentioning
confidence: 99%