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Title:

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

Document type:
Journal Article
Author(s):
Thiele Orberg, Erik; Meedt, Elisabeth; Hiergeist, Andreas; Xue, Jinling; Heinrich, Paul; Ru, Jinlong; Ghimire, Sakhila; Miltiadous, Oriana; Lindner, Sarah; Tiefgraber, Melanie; Göldel, Sophia; Eismann, Tina; Schwarz, Alix; Göttert, Sascha; Jarosch, Sebastian; Steiger, Katja; Schulz, Christian; Gigl, Michael; Fischer, Julius C; Janssen, Klaus-Peter; Quante, Michael; Heidegger, Simon; Herhaus, Peter; Verbeek, Mareike; Ruland, Jürgen; van den Brink, Marcel R M; Weber, Daniela; Edinger, Matthias; Wo...     »
Abstract:
The microbiome is a predictor of clinical outcome in patients receiving allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-SCT). Microbiota-derived metabolites can modulate these outcomes. How bacteria, fungi and viruses contribute to the production of intestinal metabolites is still unclear. We combined amplicon sequencing, viral metagenomics and targeted metabolomics from stool samples of patients receiving allo-SCT (n = 78) and uncovered a microbiome signature of Lachnospiraceae and Osc...     »
Journal title abbreviation:
Nat. Cancer
Year:
2024
Journal volume:
5
Journal issue:
1
Pages contribution:
187-208
Fulltext / DOI:
doi:10.1038/s43018-023-00669-x
Pubmed ID:
http://view.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/38172339
TUM Institution:
Institut für Allgemeine Pathologie und Pathologische Anatomie (Dr. Mogler komm.); Institut für Klinische Chemie und Pathobiochemie (Prof. Ruland); Klinik und Poliklinik für Chirurgie (Prof. Friess); Klinik und Poliklinik für Innere Medizin III, Hämatologie und Onkologie (Prof. Bassermann)
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