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Bacteria and bacteriophage consortia are associated with protective intestinal metabolites in patients receiving stem cell transplantation

Erik Thiele Orberg, Elisabeth Meedt, Andreas Hiergeist, Jinling Xue, Paul Heinrich, Jinlong Ru, Sakhila Ghimire, Oriana Miltiadous, Sarah Lindner, Melanie Tiefgraber, Sophia Göldel, Tina Eismann, Alix Schwarz, Sascha Göttert, Sebastian Jarosch, Katja Steiger, Christian Schulz, Michael Gigl, Julius Fischer, Klaus‐Peter Janssen, Michael Quante, Simon Heidegger, Peter Herhaus, Mareike Verbeek, Jürgen Ruland, Marcel R.M. van den Brink, Daniela Weber, Matthias Edinger, Daniel Wolff, Dirk H. Busch, Karin Kleigrewe, Wolfgang Herr, Florian Bassermann, André Gessner, Li Deng, Ernst Holler, Hendrik Poeck

2024Nature Cancer35 citationsDOI

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeLachnospiraceaeTransplantationMetabolomicsBiologyMetaboliteHematopoietic stem cell transplantationMetagenomicsStem cellBacteriaMicrobiologyMedicineGeneBioinformaticsInternal medicineGeneticsBiochemistryFirmicutes16S ribosomal RNAGut microbiota and healthMycobacterium research and diagnosisMetabolomics and Mass Spectrometry Studies
Bacteria and bacteriophage consortia are associated with protective intestinal metabolites in patients receiving stem cell transplantation | Litcius