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Article Dans Une Revue Gut microbes Année : 2014

Intestinal microbiota in metabolic diseases: from bacterial community structure and functions to species of pathophysiological relevance

Résumé

The trillions of bacterial cells that colonize the mammalian digestive tract influence both host physiology and the fate of dietary compounds. Gnotobionts and fecal transplantation have been instrumental in revealing the causal role of intestinal bacteria in energy homeostasis and metabolic dysfunctions such as type-2 diabetes. However, the exact contribution of gut bacterial metabolism to host energy balance is still unclear and knowledge about underlying molecular mechanisms is scant. We have previously characterized cecal bacterial community functions and host responses in diet-induced obese mice using omics approaches. Based on these studies, we here discuss issues on the relevance of mouse models, give evidence that the metabolism of cholesterol-derived compounds by gut bacteria is of particular importance in the context of metabolic disorders and that dominant species of the family Coriobacteriaceae are good models to study these functions.

Dates et versions

hal-01608260 , version 1 (03-10-2017)

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Citer

Thomas Clavel, Charles Desmarchelier, Dirk Haller, Philippe Gerard, Sascha Rohn, et al.. Intestinal microbiota in metabolic diseases: from bacterial community structure and functions to species of pathophysiological relevance. Gut microbes, 2014, 5 (4), pp.544-551. ⟨10.4161/gmic.29331⟩. ⟨hal-01608260⟩
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