The humangut microbiota is involved in host health and disease development.
2
Molecular mechanisms of poliovirus reproduction in the humangut remain largely unexplored.
3
The sides of the hole looked like a section of humangut.
4
Individual humangut bacteria often encode hundreds of enzymes for degrading different polysaccharides.
5
The humangut microbiome plays an important part in human health.
1
Blastocystis hominis is an anaerobic parasite of the humanintestinaltract belonging to the Stramenopile group.
2
Most E. coli strains are harmless and considered an important part of a healthy humanintestinaltract.
3
Results: ROCK is expressed in fibroblastic, epithelial, endothelial, and muscle cells of the humanintestinaltract and is activated in inflamed and fibrotic tissue.
Uso de human intestine en inglés
1
FcRn protein was detected in adult humanintestine by western blot.
2
Wright remarks on Banon's case of fresh-water shrimps passed from the humanintestine.
3
The humanintestine has evolved in the presence of a diverse array of luminal microorganisms.
4
Yet, the interaction of colonizing bacterial organisms with the developing humanintestine favors inflammation over immune homeostasis.
5
There is a limited understanding of the variations in expression amongst GLUT family receptors in the humanintestine.
6
Here we test experimentally for evolved cooperation within the Bacteroidales, the dominant Gram-negative bacteria of the humanintestine.
7
The distal humanintestine harbors trillions of microbes that allow us to extract calories from otherwise indigestible dietary polysaccharides.
8
Escherichia coli is the best-known member of the normal microbiota of the humanintestine and a versatile gastrointestinal pathogen.
9
Bifidobacterium is a dominant bacterial species among commensals in the humanintestine and is thought to have probiotic immunomodulatory effects.
10
It might not be the most appetising of thoughts, but the humanintestine is typically home to billions of microbes.
11
Based on findings in rodents, we sought to test the hypothesis that purinergic modulation of synaptic transmission occurs in the humanintestine.
12
As a result, whereas other primates have guts weighing four times their brains, the human brain weighs more than the humanintestine.
13
The humanintestine houses a dense and diverse microbial community critical to health, yet we know little about cooperation within this important ecosystem.
14
Conclusions: The humanintestine may have the unique NK cell differentiation system, which may contribute to maintenance of immune homeostasis in the intestine.
15
Potential roles for this MHC class I-like Fc receptor in the humanintestine include the transfer of passive immunity, induction of oral tolerance, and immunosurveillance.
16
Immunohistochemical studies of sections of humanintestine show that the FcRn is localized mostly to the epithelial cells, where it is in the apical region.