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Your search keyword '"Sonnenburg, JL"' showing total 126 results

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126 results on '"Sonnenburg, JL"'

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101. Production of α-galactosylceramide by a prominent member of the human gut microbiota.

102. Integrative analysis of the microbiome and metabolome of the human intestinal mucosal surface reveals exquisite inter-relationships.

103. Complex interactions among diet, gastrointestinal transit, and gut microbiota in humanized mice.

104. Molecular analysis of model gut microbiotas by imaging mass spectrometry and nanodesorption electrospray ionization reveals dietary metabolite transformations.

105. Prioritization of a plant polysaccharide over a mucus carbohydrate is enforced by a Bacteroides hybrid two-component system.

106. Human milk oligosaccharide consumption by intestinal microbiota.

107. Bacteroides in the infant gut consume milk oligosaccharides via mucus-utilization pathways.

108. Eating for two: how metabolism establishes interspecies interactions in the gut.

109. The intestinal microbiota and viral susceptibility.

110. Community health care: therapeutic opportunities in the human microbiome.

111. Mechanistic insight into polysaccharide use within the intestinal microbiota.

112. Specificity of polysaccharide use in intestinal bacteroides species determines diet-induced microbiota alterations.

113. Microbiology: Genetic pot luck.

114. Lifestyle of Lactobacillus plantarum in the mouse caecum.

115. Functional genomic studies of the intestinal response to a foodborne enteropathogen in a humanized gnotobiotic mouse model.

116. Genomic and metabolic studies of the impact of probiotics on a model gut symbiont and host.

117. A hybrid two-component system protein of a prominent human gut symbiont couples glycan sensing in vivo to carbohydrate metabolism.

118. Operon prediction without a training set.

119. Host-bacterial mutualism in the human intestine.

120. Glycan foraging in vivo by an intestine-adapted bacterial symbiont.

121. Getting a grip on things: how do communities of bacterial symbionts become established in our intestine?

122. A uniquely human consequence of domain-specific functional adaptation in a sialic acid-binding receptor.

123. Characterization of the acid stability of glycosidically linked neuraminic acid: use in detecting de-N-acetyl-gangliosides in human melanoma.

124. Effects of sialic acid substitutions on recognition by Sambucus nigra agglutinin and Maackia amurensis hemagglutinin.

125. De-N-acetyl-gangliosides in humans: unusual subcellular distribution of a novel tumor antigen.

126. Resolution of subunit interactions and cytoplasmic subcomplexes of the yeast vacuolar proton-translocating ATPase.

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