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  1. Triclosan is a widely used antimicrobial compound and emerging environmental contaminant. Although the role of the gut microbiome in health and disease is increasingly well established, the interaction between...

    Authors: Adrienne B Narrowe, Munira Albuthi-Lantz, Erin P Smith, Kimberly J Bower, Timberley M Roane, Alan M Vajda and Christopher S Miller
    Citation: Microbiome 2015 3:6
  2. Termites and their microbial gut symbionts are major recyclers of lignocellulosic biomass. This important symbiosis is obligate but relatively open and more complex in comparison to other well-known insect sym...

    Authors: Nurdyana Abdul Rahman, Donovan H Parks, Dana L Willner, Anna L Engelbrektson, Shana K Goffredi, Falk Warnecke, Rudolf H Scheffrahn and Philip Hugenholtz
    Citation: Microbiome 2015 3:5
  3. We are deeply grateful to all of the names listed below, who reviewed manuscripts submitted to Microbiome in 2014. We hope that you all will continue to support the journal as a reviewer or, better yet, as a cont...

    Authors: Jacques Ravel and K Eric Wommack
    Citation: Microbiome 2015 3:4
  4. Human axillary odour is commonly attributed to the bacterial degradation of precursors in sweat secretions. To assess the role of bacterial communities in the formation of body odours, we used a culture-indepe...

    Authors: Myriam Troccaz, Nadia Gaïa, Sabine Beccucci, Jacques Schrenzel, Isabelle Cayeux, Christian Starkenmann and Vladimir Lazarevic
    Citation: Microbiome 2015 3:3
  5. Staphylococcus aureus and other coagulase-positive staphylococci (CPS) colonize skin and mucous membrane sites and can cause skin and soft tissue infections (SSTIs) in humans and animals. Facto...

    Authors: Ana M Misic, Meghan F Davis, Amanda S Tyldsley, Brendan P Hodkinson, Pam Tolomeo, Baofeng Hu, Irving Nachamkin, Ebbing Lautenbach, Daniel O Morris and Elizabeth A Grice
    Citation: Microbiome 2015 3:2
  6. Metagenomics is limited in its ability to link distinct microbial populations to genetic potential due to a current lack of representative isolate genome sequences. Reference-independent approaches, which expl...

    Authors: Cedric C Laczny, Tomasz Sternal, Valentin Plugaru, Piotr Gawron, Arash Atashpendar, Houry Hera Margossian, Sergio Coronado, Laurens van der Maaten, Nikos Vlassis and Paul Wilmes
    Citation: Microbiome 2015 3:1
  7. Several cohort studies have indicated associations between S. pneumoniae and other microbes in the nasopharynx. To study causal relationships between the nasopharyngeal microbiome and pneumococcal carriage, we em...

    Authors: Amelieke JH Cremers, Aldert L Zomer, Jenna F Gritzfeld, Gerben Ferwerda, Sacha AFT van Hijum, Daniela M Ferreira, Joshua R Shak, Keith P Klugman, Jos Boekhorst, Harro M Timmerman, Marien I de Jonge, Stephen B Gordon and Peter WM Hermans
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:44
  8. The massive characterization of host-associated and environmental microbial communities has represented a real breakthrough in the life sciences in the last years. In this context, metaproteomics specifically ...

    Authors: Alessandro Tanca, Antonio Palomba, Salvatore Pisanu, Massimo Deligios, Cristina Fraumene, Valeria Manghina, Daniela Pagnozzi, Maria Filippa Addis and Sergio Uzzau
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:49
  9. The changes that occur in the microbiome of aging individuals are unclear, especially in light of the imperfect correlation of frailty with age. Studies in older human subjects have reported subtle effects, bu...

    Authors: Morgan GI Langille, Conor J Meehan, Jeremy E Koenig, Akhilesh S Dhanani, Robert A Rose, Susan E Howlett and Robert G Beiko
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:50
  10. The role of the gut microbiome in arresting pathogen colonization and growth is important for protection against Clostridium difficile infection (CDI). Observational studies associate proton pump inhibitor (PPI) ...

    Authors: Charlie T Seto, Patricio Jeraldo, Robert Orenstein, Nicholas Chia and John K DiBaise
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:42

    The Erratum to this article has been published in Microbiome 2016 4:10

  11. The variation of microbial communities associated with the human body can be the cause of many factors, including the human genetic makeup, diet, age, surroundings, and sexual behavior. In this study, we inves...

    Authors: Remco Kort, Martien Caspers, Astrid van de Graaf, Wim van Egmond, Bart Keijser and Guus Roeselers
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:41
  12. Human-associated microbial communities include fungi, but we understand little about which fungal species are present, their relative and absolute abundances, and how antimicrobial therapy impacts fungal commu...

    Authors: Sven D Willger, Sharon L Grim, Emily L Dolben, Anna Shipunova, Thomas H Hampton, Hilary G Morrison, Laura M Filkins, George A O‘Toole, Lisa A Moulton, Alix Ashare, Mitchell L Sogin and Deborah A Hogan
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:40
  13. The very low birth weight (VLBW) infant is at great risk for marked dysbiosis of the gut microbiome due to multiple factors, including physiological immaturity and prenatal/postnatal influences that disrupt th...

    Authors: Maureen W Groer, Angel A Luciano, Larry J Dishaw, Terri L Ashmeade, Elizabeth Miller and Jack A Gilbert
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:38
  14. Intestinal microbiota are implicated in risk of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) and sepsis, major diseases of preterm infants in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs). Rates of these diseases vary over time an...

    Authors: Diana H Taft, Namasivayam Ambalavanan, Kurt R Schibler, Zhuoteng Yu, David S Newburg, Doyle V Ward and Ardythe L Morrow
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:36
  15. 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) amplicon sequencing is frequently used to analyse the structure of bacterial communities from oceans to the human microbiota. However, computational power is still a major bottleneck i...

    Authors: Falk Hildebrand, Raul Tadeo, Anita Yvonne Voigt, Peer Bork and Jeroen Raes
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:30

    The Erratum to this article has been published in Microbiome 2014 2:37

  16. Sample storage conditions, extraction methods, PCR primers, and parameters are major factors that affect metagenomics analysis based on microbial 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Most published studies were limited t...

    Authors: Jun Hang, Valmik Desai, Nela Zavaljevski, Yu Yang, Xiaoxu Lin, Ravi Vijaya Satya, Luis J Martinez, Jason M Blaylock, Richard G Jarman, Stephen J Thomas and Robert A Kuschner
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:31
  17. When diseased intestine (i.e., from colon cancer, diverticulitis) requires resection, its reconnection (termed anastomosis) can be complicated by non-healing of the newly joined intestine resulting in spillage...

    Authors: Benjamin D Shogan, Daniel P Smith, Scott Christley, Jack A Gilbert, Olga Zaborina and John C Alverdy
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:35
  18. The Gulf of Maine is an important biological province of the Northwest Atlantic with high productivity year round. From an environmental Sanger-based metagenome, sampled in summer and winter, we were able to a...

    Authors: Benjamin J Tully, Rohan Sachdeva, Karla B Heidelberg and John F Heidelberg
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:34
  19. Recent innovations in sequencing technologies have provided researchers with the ability to rapidly characterize the microbial content of an environmental or clinical sample with unprecedented resolution. Thes...

    Authors: Changjin Hong, Solaiappan Manimaran, Ying Shen, Joseph F Perez-Rogers, Allyson L Byrd, Eduardo Castro-Nallar, Keith A Crandall and William Evan Johnson
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:33
  20. Periodontitis is an infectious and inflammatory disease of polymicrobial etiology that can lead to the destruction of bones and tissues that support the teeth. The management of chronic periodontitis (CP) reli...

    Authors: Vaia Galimanas, Michael William Hall, Natasha Singh, Michael David Joseph Lynch, Michael Goldberg, Howard Tenenbaum, Dennis Gerard Cvitkovitch, Josh David Neufeld and Dilani Braziunas Senadheera
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:32
  21. Changes in respiratory tract microbiota have been associated with diseases such as tuberculosis, a global public health problem that affects millions of people each year. This pilot study was carried out using...

    Authors: Luz Elena Botero, Luisa Delgado-Serrano, Martha Lucía Cepeda, Jose Ricardo Bustos, Juan Manuel Anzola, Patricia Del Portillo, Jaime Robledo and María Mercedes Zambrano
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:29
  22. Recent studies have revealed that bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid contains previously unappreciated communities of bacteria. In vitro and in vivo studies have shown that host inflammatory signals prompt bacter...

    Authors: Robert P Dickson, John R Erb-Downward, Hallie C Prescott, Fernando J Martinez, Jeffrey L Curtis, Vibha N Lama and Gary B Huffnagle
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:28
  23. The microbiota of the nares has been widely studied. However, relatively few studies have investigated the microbiota of the nasal cavity posterior to the nares. This distinct environment has the potential to ...

    Authors: Christine M Bassis, Alice L Tang, Vincent B Young and Melissa A Pynnonen
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:27
  24. Recovering individual genomes from metagenomic datasets allows access to uncultivated microbial populations that may have important roles in natural and engineered ecosystems. Understanding the roles of these ...

    Authors: Yu-Wei Wu, Yung-Hsu Tang, Susannah G Tringe, Blake A Simmons and Steven W Singer
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:26
  25. A conference entitled ‘Human microbiome science: Vision for the future’ was organized in Bethesda, MD from July 24 to 26, 2013. The event brought together experts in the field of human microbiome research and ...

    Authors: Jacques Ravel, Martin J Blaser, Jonathan Braun, Eric Brown, Frederic D Bushman, Eugene B Chang, Julian Davies, Kathryn G Dewey, Timothy Dinan, Maria Dominguez-Bello, Susan E Erdman, B Brett Finlay, Wendy S Garrett, Gary B Huffnagle, Curtis Huttenhower, Janet Jansson…
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:16
  26. Human milk is an important source of bacteria for the developing infant and has been shown to influence the bacterial composition of the neonatal gut, which in turn can affect disease risk later in life. Human...

    Authors: Camilla Urbaniak, Amy McMillan, Michelle Angelini, Gregory B Gloor, Mark Sumarah, Jeremy P Burton and Gregor Reid
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:24
  27. The vaginal microbial community plays a vital role in maintaining women’s health. Understanding the precise bacterial composition is challenging because of the diverse and difficult-to-culture nature of many b...

    Authors: Bonnie Chaban, Matthew G Links, Teenus Paramel Jayaprakash, Emily C Wagner, Danielle K Bourque, Zoe Lohn, Arianne YK Albert, Julie van Schalkwyk, Gregor Reid, Sean M Hemmingsen, Janet E Hill and Deborah M Money
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:23
  28. The bacterial communities of the nasopharynx play an important role in upper respiratory tract infections (URTIs). Our study represents the first survey of the nasopharynx during a known, controlled viral chal...

    Authors: E Kaitlynn Allen, Alex F Koeppel, J Owen Hendley, Stephen D Turner, Birgit Winther and Michèle M Sale
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:22
  29. A growing body of evidence indicates that the gut microbiome plays a role in the development of colorectal cancer (CRC). Patients with CRC harbor gut microbiomes that are structurally distinct from those of he...

    Authors: Nielson T Baxter, Joseph P Zackular, Grace Y Chen and Patrick D Schloss
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:20
  30. In recent years, studies on the human intestinal microbiota have attracted tremendous attention. Application of next generation sequencing for mapping of bacterial phylogeny and function has opened new doors t...

    Authors: Agata Wesolowska-Andersen, Martin Iain Bahl, Vera Carvalho, Karsten Kristiansen, Thomas Sicheritz-Pontén, Ramneek Gupta and Tine Rask Licht
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:19
  31. This study was undertaken to determine whether the vaginal microbiota of pregnant women who subsequently had a spontaneous preterm delivery is different from that of women who had a term delivery.

    Authors: Roberto Romero, Sonia S Hassan, Pawel Gajer, Adi L Tarca, Douglas W Fadrosh, Janine Bieda, Piya Chaemsaithong, Jezid Miranda, Tinnakorn Chaiworapongsa and Jacques Ravel
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:18
  32. The Amazon River is by far the world’s largest in terms of volume and area, generating a fluvial export that accounts for about a fifth of riverine input into the world’s oceans. Marine microbial communities o...

    Authors: Brandon M Satinsky, Brian L Zielinski, Mary Doherty, Christa B Smith, Shalabh Sharma, John H Paul, Byron C Crump and Mary Ann Moran
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:17
  33. Experimental designs that take advantage of high-throughput sequencing to generate datasets include RNA sequencing (RNA-seq), chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq), sequencing of 16S rRNA gene fr...

    Authors: Andrew D Fernandes, Jennifer NS Reid, Jean M Macklaim, Thomas A McMurrough, David R Edgell and Gregory B Gloor
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:15
  34. Cystic fibrosis (CF) is caused by mutations in the CFTR gene that predispose the airway to infection. Chronic infection by pathogens such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa leads to inflammation that gradually degrades lu...

    Authors: Thomas H Hampton, Deanna M Green, Garry R Cutting, Hilary G Morrison, Mitchell L Sogin, Alex H Gifford, Bruce A Stanton and George A O’Toole
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:14
  35. Clostridium difficile is an opportunistic human intestinal pathogen, and C. difficile infection (CDI) is one of the main causes of antibiotic-induced diarrhea and colitis. One successful approach to combat CDI, p...

    Authors: Vijay Shankar, Matthew J Hamilton, Alexander Khoruts, Amanda Kilburn, Tatsuya Unno, Oleg Paliy and Michael J Sadowsky
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:13
  36. To augment capacity-building for microbiome and probiotic research in Africa, a workshop was held in Nairobi, Kenya, at which researchers discussed human, animal, insect, and agricultural microbiome and probio...

    Authors: Gregor Reid, Nicholas Nduti, Wilbert Sybesma, Remco Kort, Tobias R Kollmann, Rod Adam, Hamadi Boga, Eric M Brown, Alexandra Einerhand, Hani El-Nezami, Gregory B Gloor, Irene I Kavere, Johanna Lindahl, Amee Manges, Wondu Mamo, Rocio Martin…
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:12
  37. Authors: Roberto Romero, Sonia S Hassan, Pawel Gajer, Adi L Tarca, Douglas W Fadrosh, Lorraine Nikita, Marisa Galuppi, Ronald F Lamont, Piya Chaemsaithong, Jezid Miranda, Tinnakorn Chaiworapongsa and Jacques Ravel
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:10

    The original article was published in Microbiome 2014 2:4

  38. Culture-independent molecular surveys targeting conserved marker genes, most notably 16S rRNA, to assess microbial diversity remain semi-quantitative due to variations in the number of gene copies between spec...

    Authors: Florent E Angly, Paul G Dennis, Adam Skarshewski, Inka Vanwonterghem, Philip Hugenholtz and Gene W Tyson
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:11
  39. Humans can spend the majority of their time indoors, but little is known about the interactions between the human and built-environment microbiomes or the forces that drive microbial community assembly in the ...

    Authors: James F Meadow, Adam E Altrichter, Steven W Kembel, Maxwell Moriyama, Timothy K O’Connor, Ann M Womack, G Z Brown, Jessica L Green and Brendan J M Bohannan
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:7
  40. To take advantage of affordable high-throughput next-generation sequencing technologies to characterize microbial community composition often requires the development of improved methods to overcome technical ...

    Authors: Douglas W Fadrosh, Bing Ma, Pawel Gajer, Naomi Sengamalay, Sandra Ott, Rebecca M Brotman and Jacques Ravel
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:6
  41. Mucosal biopsy is the most common sampling technique used to assess microbial communities associated with the intestinal mucosa. Biopsies disrupt the epithelium and can be associated with complications such as...

    Authors: Susan M Huse, Vincent B Young, Hilary G Morrison, Dionysios A Antonopoulos, John Kwon, Sushila Dalal, Rose Arrieta, Nathaniel A Hubert, Lici Shen, Joseph H Vineis, Jason C Koval, Mitchell L Sogin, Eugene B Chang and Laura E Raffals
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:5
  42. This study was undertaken to characterize the vaginal microbiota throughout normal human pregnancy using sequence-based techniques. We compared the vaginal microbial composition of non-pregnant patients with a...

    Authors: Roberto Romero, Sonia S Hassan, Pawel Gajer, Adi L Tarca, Douglas W Fadrosh, Lorraine Nikita, Marisa Galuppi, Ronald F Lamont, Piya Chaemsaithong, Jezid Miranda, Tinnakorn Chaiworapongsa and Jacques Ravel
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:4

    The Erratum to this article has been published in Microbiome 2014 2:10

  43. Shotgun metagenomics has become an important tool for investigating the ecology of microorganisms. Underlying these investigations is the assumption that metagenome sequence data accurately estimates the censu...

    Authors: Rachel Marine, Coleen McCarren, Vansay Vorrasane, Dan Nasko, Erin Crowgey, Shawn W Polson and K Eric Wommack
    Citation: Microbiome 2014 2:3

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