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Culturing Human Gut Microbiomes in the Laboratory

Simone Renwick, Caroline M. Ganobis, Riley Elder, Connor Gianetto-Hill, Gregory Higgins, Avery Robinson, Sarah J. Vancuren, Jacob Wilde, Emma Allen‐Vercoe

2021Annual Review of Microbiology30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The human gut microbiota is a complex community of prokaryotic and eukaryotic microbes and viral particles that is increasingly associated with many aspects of host physiology and health. However, the classical microbiology approach of axenic culture cannot provide a complete picture of the complex interactions between microbes and their hosts in vivo. As such, recently there has been much interest in the culture of gut microbial ecosystems in the laboratory as a strategy to better understand their compositions and functions. In this review, we discuss the model platforms and methods available in the contemporary microbiology laboratory to study human gut microbiomes, as well as current knowledge surrounding the isolation of human gut microbes for the potential construction of defined communities for use in model systems.

Topics & Concepts

AxenicMicrobiomeBiologyIsolation (microbiology)MetagenomicsGut floraGut microbiomeHuman healthHuman microbiomeHost (biology)MicrobiologyComputational biologyEcologyBacteriaBioinformaticsImmunologyGeneticsGeneMedicineEnvironmental healthGut microbiota and healthClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens researchViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology
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