Seminars in immunology special issue: Nutrition, microbiota and immunity The unexplored microbes in health and disease

Tamar Plitt, Jeremiah J. Faith

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

Functional characterization of the microbiome's influence on host physiology has been dominated by a few characteristic example strains that have been studied in detail. However, the extensive development of methods for high-throughput bacterial isolation and culture over the past decade is enabling functional characterization of the broader microbiota that may impact human health. Characterizing the understudied majority of human microbes and expanding our functional understanding of the diversity of the gut microbiota could enable new insights into diseases with unknown etiology, provide disease-predictive microbiome signatures, and advance microbial therapeutics. We summarize high-throughput culture-dependent platforms for characterizing bacterial strain function and host-interactions. We elaborate on the importance of these technologies in facilitating mechanistic studies of previously unexplored microbes, highlight new opportunities for large-scale in vitro screens of host-relevant microbial functions, and discuss the potential translational applications for microbiome science.

Original languageEnglish
Article number101735
JournalSeminars in Immunology
Volume66
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2023

Keywords

  • Cancer
  • Culturing
  • Effector strains
  • Gnotobiotics
  • Gut microbiota
  • High-throughput screen
  • Immunology
  • In vitro

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