Gnotobiology and translational microbiome research and housing mice with a charasteristized and complex microbiota in individually ventilated cages

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Gnotobiology and translational microbiome research and housing mice with a charasteristized and complex microbiota in individually ventilated cages. / Lundberg, Randi; Toft, Martin Fitzner; Hansen, Axel Kornerup.

2015. Abstract fra Scand-LAS 2015, Turku, Finland.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lundberg, R, Toft, MF & Hansen, AK 2015, 'Gnotobiology and translational microbiome research and housing mice with a charasteristized and complex microbiota in individually ventilated cages', Scand-LAS 2015, Turku, Finland, 09/06/2015 - 12/06/2015.

APA

Lundberg, R., Toft, M. F., & Hansen, A. K. (2015). Gnotobiology and translational microbiome research and housing mice with a charasteristized and complex microbiota in individually ventilated cages. Abstract fra Scand-LAS 2015, Turku, Finland.

Vancouver

Lundberg R, Toft MF, Hansen AK. Gnotobiology and translational microbiome research and housing mice with a charasteristized and complex microbiota in individually ventilated cages. 2015. Abstract fra Scand-LAS 2015, Turku, Finland.

Author

Lundberg, Randi ; Toft, Martin Fitzner ; Hansen, Axel Kornerup. / Gnotobiology and translational microbiome research and housing mice with a charasteristized and complex microbiota in individually ventilated cages. Abstract fra Scand-LAS 2015, Turku, Finland.

Bibtex

@conference{6b3283f6b3d64fb8846883d272b73d1f,
title = "Gnotobiology and translational microbiome research and housing mice with a charasteristized and complex microbiota in individually ventilated cages",
abstract = "The microbiome{\textquoteright}s impact on the human host is widely acknowledged. Correlations between certain disease states and the composition of the microbiota have been shown in both humans and animal models, but we are still in the infancy when it comes to understanding causal relationships between microbial species and host metabolism, physiology and immunology. Though established more than 60 years ago, germ-free rodents are still, and now more than ever, important models for studying the effect of different microbial communities and the mechanisms involved in the host-microbiome crosstalk. The rising era of translational microbiome research sets new requirements for our capabilities to transplant microbial communities into rodents and to ensure that the success of the transplantation is not only measured in which species are transferred to the recipient and their relative abundances, but also how the transplant interacts with the host and develops the immune system. We need to fully understand best practices for obtaining the desired result; ranging from procurement and storage of the microbial transplant, the transplantation process, to the characteristics of the recipient animal, the surrounding environment and husbandry practices. Here, the present state-of-the-art on the generation of gnotobiotic rodents for microbiome research will be reviewed.",
author = "Randi Lundberg and Toft, {Martin Fitzner} and Hansen, {Axel Kornerup}",
year = "2015",
language = "English",
note = "null ; Conference date: 09-06-2015 Through 12-06-2015",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Gnotobiology and translational microbiome research and housing mice with a charasteristized and complex microbiota in individually ventilated cages

AU - Lundberg, Randi

AU - Toft, Martin Fitzner

AU - Hansen, Axel Kornerup

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - The microbiome’s impact on the human host is widely acknowledged. Correlations between certain disease states and the composition of the microbiota have been shown in both humans and animal models, but we are still in the infancy when it comes to understanding causal relationships between microbial species and host metabolism, physiology and immunology. Though established more than 60 years ago, germ-free rodents are still, and now more than ever, important models for studying the effect of different microbial communities and the mechanisms involved in the host-microbiome crosstalk. The rising era of translational microbiome research sets new requirements for our capabilities to transplant microbial communities into rodents and to ensure that the success of the transplantation is not only measured in which species are transferred to the recipient and their relative abundances, but also how the transplant interacts with the host and develops the immune system. We need to fully understand best practices for obtaining the desired result; ranging from procurement and storage of the microbial transplant, the transplantation process, to the characteristics of the recipient animal, the surrounding environment and husbandry practices. Here, the present state-of-the-art on the generation of gnotobiotic rodents for microbiome research will be reviewed.

AB - The microbiome’s impact on the human host is widely acknowledged. Correlations between certain disease states and the composition of the microbiota have been shown in both humans and animal models, but we are still in the infancy when it comes to understanding causal relationships between microbial species and host metabolism, physiology and immunology. Though established more than 60 years ago, germ-free rodents are still, and now more than ever, important models for studying the effect of different microbial communities and the mechanisms involved in the host-microbiome crosstalk. The rising era of translational microbiome research sets new requirements for our capabilities to transplant microbial communities into rodents and to ensure that the success of the transplantation is not only measured in which species are transferred to the recipient and their relative abundances, but also how the transplant interacts with the host and develops the immune system. We need to fully understand best practices for obtaining the desired result; ranging from procurement and storage of the microbial transplant, the transplantation process, to the characteristics of the recipient animal, the surrounding environment and husbandry practices. Here, the present state-of-the-art on the generation of gnotobiotic rodents for microbiome research will be reviewed.

UR - http://congress.utu.fi/scandlas2015/Scand-LAS%20programme.pdf

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 9 June 2015 through 12 June 2015

ER -

ID: 140153588