The Genetic and Biochemical Diversity of Gut Microbiota
A special issue of Microorganisms (ISSN 2076-2607). This special issue belongs to the section "Gut Microbiota".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 November 2021) | Viewed by 14598
Special Issue Editor
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Research in the gut microbiome is moving from data accumulation to integration, and more and more comprehensive models are created to encompass diversity of interactions between nutrition, gut microbiome, and the host. NGS data provide insights into the tremendous diversity of metabolic potential in microbial community; biochemical profiling of nutrition and drug components, microbial media, and human samples help toward the discovery of novel active compounds, compounds created through interactions of human and microbial enzymes acting on complex substrates; and finally, the resulting compounds are able to participate in novel metabolic circles as well as start cascades of immune, endocrine, neurotrophic, and stress-response reactions.
The objective of this Special Issue is to provoke discussion aimed at knowledge integration and to represent the diversity of pathways entangled in the holobiont. We invite microbiome researchers to elaborate on existing issues of food and fiber digestion, drug metabolism, polyphenol bioconversion, neuroendocrine metabolites, and human–microbial gene interaction in health and disease, with a focus on describing the pathways interactions in more detail, presenting current unsolved issues, and stating unmet needs in holobiont research.
Bioinformatic approaches to complex system analysis and biochemical research papers are both welcome to demonstrate the interdisciplinary nature of the field and state-of-the-art in the gut microbiome field.
Dr. Dmitry G. Alexeev
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- bioconversion
- host–microbiome interactions
- microbiome diversity
- microbial enzymes
- microbiota-accessible carbohydrates
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