Search

Your search keyword '"Julia K. Copeland"' showing total 31 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Julia K. Copeland" Remove constraint Author: "Julia K. Copeland"
31 results on '"Julia K. Copeland"'

Search Results

1. Mother’s milk microbiota is associated with the developing gut microbial consortia in very-low-birth-weight infants

2. Systematic profiling of the chicken gut microbiome reveals dietary supplementation with antibiotics alters expression of multiple microbial pathways with minimal impact on community structure

3. Examining the relationship between maternal body size, gestational glucose tolerance status, mode of delivery and ethnicity on human milk microbiota at three months post-partum

4. Gut-associated IgA+ immune cells regulate obesity-related insulin resistance

5. The Impact of Migration on the Gut Metagenome of South Asian Canadians

6. Assessment of Inter-Laboratory Variation in the Characterization and Analysis of the Mucosal Microbiota in Crohn’s Disease and Ulcerative Colitis

7. Mycobiome Sequencing and Analysis Applied to Fungal Community Profiling of the Lower Respiratory Tract During Fungal Pathogenesis

8. Seasonal Community Succession of the Phyllosphere Microbiome

9. Oligosaccharides and Microbiota in Human Milk Are Interrelated at 3 Months Postpartum in a Cohort of Women with a High Prevalence of Gestational Impaired Glucose Tolerance

10. Invariant natural killer T cells minimally influence gut microbiota composition in mice

11. Maternal Diet and Infant Feeding Practices Are Associated with Variation in the Human Milk Microbiota at 3 Months Postpartum in a Cohort of Women with High Rates of Gestational Glucose Intolerance

12. A practical assessment of nano-phosphate on soybean (Glycine max) growth and microbiome establishment

13. Limiting oxidative DNA damage reduces microbe-induced colitis-associated colorectal cancer

14. Characterization and predictive functional profiles on metagenomic 16S rRNA data of liver transplant recipients: A longitudinal study

15. Human milk nutrient fortifiers alter the developing gastrointestinal microbiota of very-low-birth-weight infants

16. Mothers of Preterm Infants Have Individualized Breast Milk Microbiota that Changes Temporally Based on Maternal Characteristics

17. Examining the relationship between maternal body size, gestational glucose tolerance status, mode of delivery and ethnicity on mother’s milk microbiota at three months post-partum

18. Chloroplast sequence variation and the efficacy of peptide nucleic acids for blocking host amplification in plant microbiome studies

19. Examining the relationship between maternal body size, gestational glucose tolerance status, mode of delivery and ethnicity on human milk microbiota at three months post-partum

20. Impact of Immunosuppression on the Metagenomic Composition of the Intestinal Microbiome: a Systems Biology Approach to Post-Transplant Diabetes

21. Microbial diversity in leaves, trunk and rhizosphere of coconut palms (Cocos nucifera L.) associated with the coconut lethal yellowing phytoplasma in Grand-Lahou, Cte dIvoire

22. Gut-associated IgA+ immune cells regulate obesity-related insulin resistance

23. Mycobiome Sequencing and Analysis Applied to Fungal Community Profiling of the Lower Respiratory Tract During Fungal Pathogenesis

24. Assembly and ecological function of the root microbiome across angiosperm plant species

25. Methods and Strategies to Examine the Human Breastmilk Microbiome

26. Regulation of Obesity-Related Insulin Resistance with Gut Anti-inflammatory Agents

27. Metabolic Reprogramming by Hexosamine Biosynthetic and Golgi N-Glycan Branching Pathways

28. Seasonal community succession of the phyllosphere microbiome

29. Global Analysis of the Fungal Microbiome in Cystic Fibrosis Patients Reveals Loss of Function of the Transcriptional Repressor Nrg1 as a Mechanism of Pathogen Adaptation

30. Gut Microbial Metabolism Drives Transformation of Msh2-Deficient Colon Epithelial Cells

31. Global Analysis of the Fungal Microbiome in Cystic Fibrosis Patients Reveals Loss of Function of the Transcriptional Repressor Nrg1 as a Mechanism of Pathogen Adaptation.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources