The microbiome shapes the development of insulin-producing cells in infancy, leading to long-term changes in metabolism and ...
The microbiome shapes development of insulin-producing cells in infancy, leading to long-term changes in metabolism and diabetes risk, new research in mice has found. The results could ultimately help ...
In the future, therapies that focus on gut health—whether through diet, medication, or nerve stimulation—could be used to ...
It affects your mood, your sleep, even your motivation to exercise. There's convincing evidence that it's the starting point ...
Specifically, we showed that a group of bacteria called Blautia was more common in multiple sclerosis patients, while ...
The ratio of two types of bacteria in the gut microbiome may be able to predict disease severity in multiple sclerosis, ...
For millennia, humans have had an unwritten trade deal with the microbes that inhabit our guts. We feed them fiber, and they ...
A group of gut bacteria successfully hindered recurrent Clostridium difficile infection in mice, offering alternative ...
Early-life gut microbes could play a key role in protecting against diabetes. A healthy start for a healthier future.
Gut microbes that were thought to feed exclusively on dietary fiber also get fed sugar from our guts, from which they produce ...
Mice that are exposed to broad-spectrum antibiotics ... Pancreatic cells don't generally grow in adulthood, but exposure to a specific gut microbe might change that, the new results suggest.
Having specific kinds of microbes in the gut in infancy may lower the risk of diabetes, according to research in mice. At-risk male mice were six times less likely to develop diabetes if they had been ...