2013
Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and human intestinal health
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Cited by 1,177 publications
(895 citation statements)
References 63 publications
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“…To specify the key bioactive components in FP-CS responsible for inhibiting NKTCL growth, we applied the HM700 metabolome (a high-throughput targeted quantification kit for metabolites based on liquid chromatograph-mass spectrometry21) to preliminarily screen the metabolites in FP-CS and revealed an eminently elevated level of butyric acid in FP-CS compared with the blank culture medium of F. prausnitzii (figure 3J). Subsequently, targeted metabolomic analysis of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) further verified a substantial increase in butyric acid level in FP-CS (figure 3K,M), which aligns with previous findings that the commensal bacterium F. prausnitzii constitutes more than 5% of the total bacterial population in healthy adults and represents one of the predominant butyrate-producing bacteria in the gastrointestinal tract 22…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 89%
“…To specify the key bioactive components in FP-CS responsible for inhibiting NKTCL growth, we applied the HM700 metabolome (a high-throughput targeted quantification kit for metabolites based on liquid chromatograph-mass spectrometry21) to preliminarily screen the metabolites in FP-CS and revealed an eminently elevated level of butyric acid in FP-CS compared with the blank culture medium of F. prausnitzii (figure 3J). Subsequently, targeted metabolomic analysis of short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) further verified a substantial increase in butyric acid level in FP-CS (figure 3K,M), which aligns with previous findings that the commensal bacterium F. prausnitzii constitutes more than 5% of the total bacterial population in healthy adults and represents one of the predominant butyrate-producing bacteria in the gastrointestinal tract 22…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 89%
“…With regard to the sources of these 84 F . prausnitzii strains, we found that a majority of strains were isolated from the feces of humans, such as F. prausnitzii KLE1255, F. prausnitzii APC918/95b, and F. prausnitzii A2165, which was consistent with the finding that F. prausnitzii is dominant in the intestinal tract of humans ( Miquel et al., 2013 ). Although the genomes of 84 F .…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 89%
“…Our findings further show that F. prausnitzii accounts for approximately 18% of the total faecal gut microbiota in senior orienteers compared to 15% among community-dwelling older adults. This is in accordance with two previous independent studies showing that 5-15% of the microbiota consists of F. prausnitzii [39,54]. This observation may indicate that senior orienteers have a higher production of butyrate.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
