Literature DB >> 18323636

Application of several molecular techniques to study numerically predominant Bifidobacterium spp. and Bacteroidales order strains in the feces of healthy children.

Andrei N Shkoporov1, Ekaterina V Khokhlova, Elena V Kulagina, Vladimir V Smeianov, Lyudmila I Kafarskaia, Boris A Efimov.   

Abstract

Bifidobacteria and Bacteroides-like bacteria are strictly anaerobic nonpathogenic members of human intestinal microflora. Here we describe an analysis of the species and subspecies composition of these bacterial populations in healthy children using a combination of culture and molecular methods at two different time points. It was found that B. bifidum and B. longum are the most common dominant taxons in infants aged between 8 and 16 months. The majority of the infants carried several dominant Bifidobacterium strains belonging to different species. Examination of the dominant bifidoflora in some of these children after a 5-year period showed major shifts in both species and strain composition, but the dominant strains remained unchanged in two children. The majority of dominant Bacteroides-like isolates belonged to species B. vulgatus and B. uniformis, but members of genera Alistipes and Barnesiella were common too. In addition, a novel approach to species identification of Bacteroidales order bacteria using amplified ribosomal DNA restriction analysis (ARDRA) is described.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18323636     DOI: 10.1271/bbb.70628

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biosci Biotechnol Biochem        ISSN: 0916-8451            Impact factor:   2.043


  7 in total

Review 1.  Gut microbial communities modulating brain development and function.

Authors:  Maha Al-Asmakh; Farhana Anuar; Fahad Zadjali; Joseph Rafter; Sven Pettersson
Journal:  Gut Microbes       Date:  2012-06-29

2.  Classification of Culturable Bifidobacterial Population from Colonic Samples of Wild Pigs (Sus scrofa) Based on Three Molecular Genetic Methods.

Authors:  Radko Pechar; Jiří Killer; Chahrazed Mekadim; Martina Geigerová; Vojtěch Rada
Journal:  Curr Microbiol       Date:  2017-07-29       Impact factor: 2.188

3.  Intraspecies Genomic Diversity and Long-Term Persistence of Bifidobacterium longum.

Authors:  Andrei V Chaplin; Boris A Efimov; Vladimir V Smeianov; Lyudmila I Kafarskaia; Alla P Pikina; Andrei N Shkoporov
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-08-14       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Gene-trait matching across the Bifidobacterium longum pan-genome reveals considerable diversity in carbohydrate catabolism among human infant strains.

Authors:  Silvia Arboleya; Francesca Bottacini; Mary O'Connell-Motherway; C Anthony Ryan; R Paul Ross; Douwe van Sinderen; Catherine Stanton
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2018-01-08       Impact factor: 3.969

5.  Long-term colonization exceeding six years from early infancy of Bifidobacterium longum subsp. longum in human gut.

Authors:  Kaihei Oki; Takuya Akiyama; Kazunori Matsuda; Agata Gawad; Hiroshi Makino; Eiji Ishikawa; Kenji Oishi; Akira Kushiro; Junji Fujimoto
Journal:  BMC Microbiol       Date:  2018-12-12       Impact factor: 3.605

6.  Early-Life Intervention Using Exogenous Fecal Microbiota Alleviates Gut Injury and Reduce Inflammation Caused by Weaning Stress in Piglets.

Authors:  Xin Ma; Yuchen Zhang; Tingting Xu; Mengqi Qian; Zhiren Yang; Xiuan Zhan; Xinyan Han
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2021-06-10       Impact factor: 5.640

7.  Draft Genome Sequences of Two Pairs of Human Intestinal Bifidobacterium longum subsp. longum Strains, 44B and 1-6B and 35B and 2-2B, Consecutively Isolated from Two Children after a 5-Year Time Period.

Authors:  A N Shkoporov; B A Efimov; E V Khokhlova; A V Chaplin; L I Kafarskaya; A S Durkin; J McCorrison; M Torralba; M Gillis; G Sutton; D B Weibel; K E Nelson; V V Smeianov
Journal:  Genome Announc       Date:  2013-05-16
  7 in total

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