Lindsay J Hall

Lindsay J Hall
  • Ph.D.
  • Chair of Microbiome Research at University of Birmingham

About

212
Publications
34,004
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Introduction
The Hall lab’s research focus involves defining the complex interactions of the host with the intestinal microbiota and pathogens at mucosal surfaces including how the dominant early life microbiota genus Bifidobacterium promotes host well-being. We utilise multi-disciplinary approaches including; microbiology techniques, metabolomics, next generation sequencing (RNASeq, 16S rRNA, WGS), bioinformatics tools, in vivo models (germ-free and infection models) and human studies ( infants).
Current institution
University of Birmingham
Current position
  • Chair of Microbiome Research
Additional affiliations
November 2015 - present
Quadram Institute
Position
  • Group Leader
August 2014 - October 2015
University of East Anglia
Position
  • Senior Lecturer and Principle Investigator
November 2011 - July 2014
University of East Anglia
Position
  • Lecturer and Principle Investigator

Publications

Publications (212)
Article
Full-text available
Everyday actions such as eating, tooth brushing or applying cosmetics inherently modulate our microbiome. Advances in sequencing technologies now facilitate detailed microbial profiling, driving intentional microbiome-targeted product development. Inspired by an academic-industry workshop held in January 2024, this review explores the oral, skin an...
Article
Weberviruses are bacteriophages (phages) that can infect and lyse clinically relevant, multidrug-resistant (MDR) strains of Klebsiella. They are an attractive therapeutic option to tackle Klebsiella infections due to their high burst sizes, long shelf life and associated depolymerases. In this study we isolated and characterized seven new lytic pha...
Preprint
The development of the human gut microbiota during infancy is marked by frequent colonization of Enterobacteriaceae, a bacterial family notoriously associated with various diseases. Yet, despite their prominence in the absence of illness, their exact ecological role during healthy maturation of the infant gut remains poorly explored. Here, we analy...
Article
Full-text available
A healthy early-life gut microbiota plays an important role in maintaining immediate and long-term health. Perturbations, particularly in low-to middle-income communities, are associated with increased infection risk. Thus, a promising avenue for restoring a healthy infant microbiota is to select key beneficial bacterial candidates from underexplor...
Preprint
Background: Chronic liver disease (CLD) is a progressive condition that, in its advanced stages, leads to cirrhosis with related clinical complications, and can lead to acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF) - a syndrome marked by critical illness, multi-organ dysfunction and high mortality. Systemic inflammation in ACLF can occur without overt infe...
Preprint
Full-text available
Environmental enteric dysfunction (EED) in early life, caused by gut pathogen colonisation, contributes to chronic systemic inflammation (CSI) which impairs growth and organ development and increases non-communicable disease risk. Pro/synbiotics may prevent or ameliorate EED, and thereby reduce CSI, through boosting colonisation resistance against...
Preprint
Among coagulase-negative staphylococci, Staphylococcus haemolyticus is a primary cause of bloodstream infections in preterm infants, with gut colonisation being recognised as a risk factor for subsequent infection. Through a re-analysis of a 16S rRNA gene sequencing dataset (n=497 preterm infants), we found that S. haemolyticus was abundant and pre...
Preprint
Gut microbiome development is strongly impacted by breastmilk and human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs), with short- and long-term health implications. HMO metabolism is best characterised within bifidobacteria, but the full range of other HMO-utilising species remains unknown. This study examined HMO-utilising bacteria that colonise preterm infants (...
Preprint
Bacteria of the genus Bifidobacterium are pivotal for human health, especially in early life, where they dominate the gut microbiome in healthy infants. Bacteriophages, viruses of bacteria, are drivers of gut bacterial composition in the human gut and could affect bifidobacterial abundance. Here, we use a bioinformatics approach to explore the dire...
Preprint
Animal hosts harbour divergent microbiota, including various Bifidobacterium species and strains, yet their evolutionary relationships, and functional adaptions remain understudied. By integrating taxonomic, genomic and predicted functional annotations, we uncover how Bifidobacterium adapts to host-specific environments, shaped by vertical transmis...
Article
Ensuring prompt and precise identification of bacterial pathogens is essential for initiating appropriate antibiotic therapy and combating severe bacterial infections effectively. Traditional microbiological diagnostics, involving initial culturing and subsequent pathogen detection, are often laborious and time-consuming. Even though modern techniq...
Preprint
Preterm infants (<37 weeks’ gestation) are often administered broad-spectrum antibiotics in hospitals due to their vulnerability to severe morbidity, including necrotising enterocolitis and sepsis. However, antibiotics can disrupt the development of early-life microbiota, potentially impairing gut immunity and colonisation resistance. Evidence show...
Article
Full-text available
Background/Objectives: Adequate folate intake is required in preterm infants for rapid growth and development, but there is little evidence to back recommendations. We aimed to assess folate status in preterm infants at discharge and in early infancy, according to exposure to folate sources, particularly in those exclusively/predominantly breastfed...
Preprint
Full-text available
Weberviruses are bacteriophages (phages) that have been shown to infect and lyse members of the genus Klebsiella . Due to their antimicrobial properties, phages and their products have emerged as a potential therapeutic option to help tackle increasing rates of antimicrobial resistance amongst Klebsiella spp. Weberviruses are an attractive option d...
Article
Full-text available
Aim: Changes in host-associated microbial communities (i.e., the microbiota) may modulate responses to checkpoint blockade immunotherapy. In the KELLY phase II study (NCT03222856), we previously demonstrated that pembrolizumab [anti-programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1)] combined with eribulin (plus microtubule-targeting chemotherapy) showed encou...
Article
Full-text available
Background The Kasai portoenterostomy (KPE) aims to re-establish bile flow in biliary atresia (BA); however, BA remains the commonest indication for liver transplantation in pediatrics. Gut microbiota-host interplay is increasingly associated with outcomes in chronic liver disease. This study characterized fecal microbiota and fatty acid metabolite...
Preprint
Full-text available
Bifidobacterium species and strains are key members of the gut microbiota, appearing soon after birth and persisting into adulthood. Resistant starch is an important dietary substrate for adult-associated bifidobacteria, where its fermentation supports host health. However, little is known about how different starch structures interact with bifidob...
Article
Full-text available
Severe brain damage is common among premature infants, and the gut microbiota has been implicated in its pathology. Although the order of colonizing bacteria is well described, the mechanisms underlying aberrant assembly of the gut microbiota remain elusive. Here, we employed long-read nanopore sequencing to assess abundances of microbial species a...
Preprint
Gut microbes have merged as powerful regulators of cancer responses, with Bifidobacterium species and strains playing a key role in promoting anti-tumour immunity. While they represent promising candidates for cancer therapeutics, the specific underlying microbial mechanisms driving their efficacy remains poorly understood. In this study, we demons...
Preprint
In early life, diet plays a key role in shaping the infant microbiota, yet the impact of breast milk and formula on microbial ecosystems at different stages of infant development remains poorly understood. Here, we performed static batch culture experiments using infant faecal samples at ages 1, 12 and 18 months of age, supplemented with either bre...
Poster
Full-text available
We presented our work on Bifidobacteria isolated from Cameroonian Infants. A huge step into exploring Bifidobacteria from Cameroonian niches. Interestingly, the strains display outstanding health beneficial properties from genomic insights.
Article
Full-text available
Human milk is the best nutrition for infants, providing optimal support for the developing immune system and gut microbiota. Hence, it has been used as source for probiotic strain isolation, including members of the genus Bifidobacterium, in an effort to provide beneficial effects to infants who cannot be exclusively breastfed. However, not all sup...
Article
Background Recent advances have significantly expanded our understanding of the gut microbiome's influence on host physiology and metabolism. However, the specific role of certain microorganisms in gestational health and fetal development remains underexplored. Objective This study investigates the impact of Bifidobacterium breve UCC2003 on fetal...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Our understanding of particular gut microbiota members such as Bifidobacterium and Enterococcus in low-middle-income countries remains very limited, particularly early life strain-level beneficial traits. This study addresses this gap by exploring a collection of bacterial strains isolated from the gut of Zimbabwean infants; comparing...
Preprint
Full-text available
In recent years, our understanding of the gut microbiome's impact on host physiology and metabolism has grown exponentially. Yet, the specific role of certain microorganisms in regulating gestational health and fetal development remains largely unexplored. During pregnancy, Bifidobacterium represents a key beneficial microbiota genus that provides...
Article
Full-text available
Objective Study of the human infant gut microbiome requires the use of surrogate mammalian species such as mice. We sought to investigate the usefulness of the greater wax moth larva, Galleria mellonella, as an alternative. Results We have analysed the native gut microbiome of Galleria and developed methods for clearing the native microbiome and i...
Article
Full-text available
Clostridium perfringens causes multiple diseases in humans and animals. Its pathogenic effect is supported by a broad and heterogeneous arsenal of toxins and other virulence factors associated with a specific host tropism. Molecular approaches have indicated that most C. perfringens toxins produce membrane pores, leading to osmotic cell disruption...
Article
Full-text available
Background Gut microbiota play a key role in host health, with certain Bifidobacterium strains critical for immune development. The healthy gut of breastfed infants is dominated by these pioneer microbes, especially the strains that feed on human milk oligosaccharides. Objective This is a scoping review of gut microbiome research from Zimbabwe. It...
Article
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Here, we describe the draft genome sequence of Bifidobacterium breve DSM 32583 isolated from human milk obtained from a healthy mother. Potentially, this B. breve strain could serve as a probiotic.
Article
Full-text available
The early life microbiota is an ‘immature’ and highly dynamic microbial ecosystem, which is central to infant health. Both perinatal and postnatal factors can impact the gut microbiota, with antibiotics proposed to cause short and longer-term disturbances. Antibiotics not only impact microbial community composition, they also contribute to the over...
Article
Full-text available
Multiple factors contribute to establishment of skin microbial communities in early life, with perturbations in these ecosystems impacting health. This review provides an update on methods used to profile the skin microbiome and how this is helping enhance our understanding of infant skin microbial communities, including factors that influence comp...
Article
Full-text available
Two novel bacterial isolates were cultured from faecal samples of patients attending the Breast Care clinic at the Norwich and Norfolk University Hospital. Strain LH1062T was isolated from a 58-year-old female diagnosed with invasive adenocarcinoma with ductal carcinoma in situ. Strain LH1063T was isolated from a healthy 51-year-old female. Isolate...
Article
Full-text available
The human skin microbiome represents a variety of complex microbial ecosystems that play a key role in host health. Molecular methods to study these communities have been developed but have been largely limited to low-throughput quantification and short amplicon-based sequencing, providing limited functional information about the communities presen...
Article
Full-text available
Bacteriophages (phages) within the genus Przondovirus are T7-like podoviruses belonging to the subfamily Studiervirinae, within the family Autographiviridae, and have a highly conserved genome organisation. The genomes of these phages range from 37 to 42 kb in size, encode 50-60 genes and are characterised by the presence of direct terminal repeats...
Article
Full-text available
Clostridium perfringens is an anaerobic toxin-producing bacterium associated with intestinal diseases, particularly in neonatal humans and animals. Infant gut microbiome studies have recently indicated a link between C. perfringens and the preterm infant disease necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), with specific NEC cases associated with overabundant C...
Article
Full-text available
In children exposed to poor hygiene and sanitation, invasion of the gut by pathogenic microbes can result in a subclinical enteropathy termed "environmental enteric dysfunction" (EED) that contributes to undernutrition, growth faltering, and impaired organ development. EED may already be present by age 6-12 weeks; therefore, interventions that can...
Article
Full-text available
Human breast milk (HBM) is the main source of nutrition for neonates across the critical early-life developmental period. The highest demand for energy is due to rapid neurophysiological expansion post-delivery, which is largely met by human milk lipids (HMLs). These HMLs also play a prebiotic role and potentially promote the growth of certain comm...
Article
Full-text available
The development of infant gut microbiome is a pivotal process affecting the ecology and function of the microbiome, as well as host health. While the establishment of the infant microbiome has been of interest for decades, the focus on gut microbial metabolism and the resulting small molecules (metabolites) has been rather limited. However, technol...
Preprint
Full-text available
Bacteriophages (phages) within the Przondovirus genus are T7-like podoviruses belonging to the Studiervirinae subfamily, within the Autographiviridae family and have a highly conserved genome organisation. The genome size of these phages ranges from 37 kb to 42 kb, encode 50-60 genes and are characterised by the presence of direct terminal repeats...
Article
Full-text available
Preterm infants with very low birthweight are at serious risk for necrotizing enterocolitis. To functionally analyse the principles of three successful preventive NEC regimens, we characterize fecal samples of 55 infants (<1500 g, n = 383, female = 22) longitudinally (two weeks) with respect to gut microbiome profiles (bacteria, archaea, fungi, vir...
Article
Background and aims: Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a life-threatening disease and the most common gastrointestinal emergency in premature infants. Accurate early diagnosis is challenging. Modified Bell's staging is routinely used to guide diagnosis, but early diagnostic signs are nonspecific, potentially leading to unobserved disease progress...
Article
Full-text available
Candida parapsilosis is a human fungal pathogen of increasing incidence and causes invasive candidiasis, notably in preterm or low-birthweight neonates. Here, we present the genome sequence of C. parapsilosis NCYC 4289, a fecal isolate from a preterm male infant.
Preprint
Full-text available
The human skin microbiome represents a variety of complex microbial ecosystems that play a key role in host health. Molecular methods to study these communities have been developed but have been largely limited to low-throughput quantification and short amplicon sequencing, providing limited functional information about the communities present. Sho...
Article
Prophylactic administration of oral probiotics is associated with significant reductions in the morbidity and mortality of necrotising enterocolitis in preterm infants. We document the first case of Bifidobacterium longum subsp. infantis sub-clinical bacteraemia, in an extremely low birth weight preterm infant, since introduction of routine probiot...
Article
Whether the human fetus and the prenatal intrauterine environment (amniotic fluid and placenta) are stably colonized by microbial communities in a healthy pregnancy remains a subject of debate. Here we evaluate recent studies that characterized microbial populations in human fetuses from the perspectives of reproductive biology, microbial ecology,...
Article
Full-text available
Members of the gut microbiota genus Bifidobacterium are widely distributed human and animal symbionts believed to exert beneficial effects on their hosts. However, in-depth genomic analyses of animal-associated species and strains are somewhat lacking, particularly in wild animal populations. Here, to examine patterns of host specificity and carboh...
Preprint
Full-text available
Candida parapsilosis is a human fungal pathogen of increasing incidence and a common cause of invasive candidiasis, notably in neonates born either prematurely or with low birthweight. Here, using a combination of short- and long-read sequencing, we provide the draft genome of C. parapsilosis NCYC 4289, a faecal-derived isolate from a young male in...
Preprint
Full-text available
Objectives: Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a life-threatening disease, and the most common gastrointestinal emergency in premature infants. Accurate early diagnosis is challenging. Modified Bells staging is routinely used to guide diagnosis, but early diagnostic signs are non-specific, potentially leading to unobserved disease progression, whic...
Article
Full-text available
Perturbations in the gut microbiome have been associated with colorectal cancer (CRC), with the colonic overabundance of Fusobacterium nucleatum shown as the most consistent marker. Despite its significance in the promotion of CRC, genomic studies of Fusobacterium is limited. We enrolled 43 Vietnamese CRC patients and 25 participants with non-cance...
Article
Full-text available
The gut microbiome lies at the intersection between the environment and the host, with the ability to modify host responses to disease-relevant exposures and stimuli. This is evident in how enteric microbes interact with the immune system, e.g., supporting immune maturation in early life, affecting drug efficacy via modulation of immune responses,...
Article
Full-text available
Vaccines are one of the greatest successes of public health, preventing millions of cases of disease and death in children each year. However, the efficacy of many vaccines can vary greatly between infants from geographically and socioeconomically distinct locations. Differences in the composition of the intestinal microbiome have emerged as one of...
Article
Full-text available
Background: There is near-global consensus that all newborns be given parenteral vitamin K1 (VK1 ) at birth as prophylaxis against VK deficiency bleeding (VKDB). Breastmilk has a low VK content and cases of late VKDB are reported in exclusively breastmilk-fed preterm infants despite VK prophylaxis at birth. Objectives: To assess the prevalence o...
Article
Full-text available
The gut microbiota plays a central role in regulating host metabolism. While substantial progress has been made in discerning how the microbiota influences host functions post birth and beyond, little is known about how key members of the maternal gut microbiota can influence feto-placental growth. Notably, in pregnant women, Bifidobacterium repres...
Preprint
Full-text available
Preterm infants with very low birthweight are at serious risk for necrotizing enterocolitis. To functionally analyse the principles of three successful preventive NEC regimens, we characterized faecal samples of 54 infants (< 1,500 g, n = 383) longitudinally (two weeks) with respect to gut microbiome profiles (bacteria, archaea, fungi, viruses), mi...
Preprint
Preterm infants with very low birthweight are at serious risk for necrotizing enterocolitis. To functionally analyse the principles of three successful preventive NEC regimens, we characterized faecal samples of 54 infants (< 1,500 g, n = 383) longitudinally (two weeks) with respect to gut microbiome profiles (bacteria, archaea, fungi, viruses), mi...
Article
Full-text available
We describe a precision medicine workflow, the integrated single nucleotide polymorphism network platform (iSNP), designed to determine the mechanisms by which SNPs affect cellular regulatory networks, and how SNP co-occurrences contribute to disease pathogenesis in ulcerative colitis (UC). Using SNP profiles of 378 UC patients we map the regulator...
Article
Full-text available
Background Malnutrition amongst under-fives remains common in resource-poor countries and is resistant to current interventions. New opportunities have emerged to target “environmental enteric dysfunction” (EED) that refers to the abnormal gut structure and function that results from colonisation of the gut with pathogenic microbes and compromises...
Preprint
Full-text available
Perturbations in the gut microbiome have been linked to the promotion and prognosis of colorectal cancer (CRC), with the colonic overabundance of Fusobacterium nucleatum shown as the most consistent marker. Despite the increasing health burden inflicted by CRC in low- and middle-income countries like Vietnam, the CRC-specific microbiome in these po...
Article
Intestinal macrophages play a vital role in the maintenance of gut homeostasis through signals derived from the microbiota. We previously demonstrated that microbial‐derived metabolites can shape the metabolic functions of macrophages. Here, we show that antibiotic‐induced disruption of the intestinal microbiota dramatically alters both the local m...
Preprint
Bacteriocins are ribosomally-synthesized antimicrobial peptides produced by bacteria with either narrow or broad spectrum activity. Many genome mining studies have indicated that bacteriocin gene clusters are widespread within certain gut microbiota members. In early life, Bifidobacterium comprise the dominant microbiota genus in vaginally delivere...
Article
Full-text available
Four bacterial strains were isolated from two different colony sources of the wax moth Galleria mellonella . They were characterized by a polyphasic approach including 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis, core-genome analysis, average nucleotide identity (ANI) analysis, digital DNA–DNA hybridization (dDDH), determination of G+C content, screening of an...
Article
Full-text available
Background The early life period represents the first step in establishing a beneficial microbial ecosystem, which in turn affects both short and longer-term health. Changes during pregnancy influence the neonatal microbiome; through transmission of maternal microbes during childbirth, and beyond, through nutritional programming. However, in-depth...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background Malnutrition amongst under-fives remains common in resource-poor countries and is resistant to current interventions. New opportunities have emerged to target “environmental enteric dysfunction” (EED) that refers to the abnormal gut structure and function that results from colonisation of the gut with pathogenic microbes and compromises...
Article
Full-text available
Bifidobacterium pseudocatenulatum is a beneficial member of the human gut microbiota. The organism can modulate inflammation and has probiotic potential, but its characteristics are largely strain dependent and associated with distinct genomic and biochemical features.
Article
Full-text available
Importance Evidence of gut microbiota perturbations has accumulated for multiple psychiatric disorders, with microbiota signatures proposed as potential biomarkers. However, no attempts have been made to evaluate the specificity of these across the range of psychiatric conditions. Objective To conduct an umbrella and updated meta-analysis of gut m...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background Clostridium perfringens is an anaerobic toxin-producing bacterium that has long been associated with intestinal diseases, particularly in neonatal humans and animals. More recently, infant gut microbiome studies have suggested an important link between C. perfringens and the devastating preterm-associated disease Necrotising Enterocoliti...
Article
Full-text available
The gut microbiota’s function in regulating health has seen it linked to disease progression in several cancers. However, there is limited research detailing its influence in breast cancer (BrCa). This study found that antibiotic induced perturbation of the gut microbiota significantly increases tumour progression in multiple BrCa mouse models. Met...
Preprint
Full-text available
The gut microbiota plays a central role in regulating host metabolism. While substantial progress has been made in discerning how the microbiota influences host functions post birth and beyond, little is known about how key members of the maternal gut microbiota can influence feto-placental growth. Notably, in pregnant women, Bifidobacterium repres...
Preprint
Full-text available
Intestinal macrophages play a vital role in the maintenance of gut homeostasis through signals derived from the microbiota. We previously demonstrated that microbial-derived metabolites can shape the metabolic functions of macrophages. Here, we show that antibiotic-induced disruption of the intestinal microbiota dramatically alters both the local m...
Article
Full-text available
As part of the ongoing studies with clinically relevant Klebsiella spp., we characterized the genomes of three clinical GES-5-positive ST138 strains originally identified as Klebsiella oxytoca. blaOXY gene, average nucleotide identity and phylogenetic analyses showed the strains to be Klebsiella michiganensis. Affiliation of the strains to ST138 le...
Preprint
Full-text available
Members of the gut microbiota genus Bifidobacterium are widely distributed human and animal symbionts believed to exert beneficial effects on their hosts. However, in-depth genomic analyses of animal-associated species and strains are somewhat lacking, particularly in wild animal populations. Here, to examine patterns of host specificity and carboh...
Preprint
Full-text available
Bifidobacterium pseudocatenulatum is a member of the human gut microbiota, and has previously been used as a probiotic to improve gut integrity and reduce inflammatory responses. We showed previously that B. pseudocatenulatum was significantly depleted during dysenteric diarrhea, suggesting the organism may aid in recovery from diarrhea. Here, in o...
Preprint
Full-text available
As part of ongoing studies with clinically relevant Klebsiella spp., we characterized the genomes of three clinical GES-5-positive ST138 strains originally identified as Klebsiella oxytoca. blaOXY gene, average nucleotide identity and phylogenetic analyses showed the strains to be Klebsiella michiganensis. Affiliation of the strains to ST138 led us...
Article
Bifidobacterium bifidum is enriched in the gut microbiome of patients who respond to cancer treatment, but only selected strains of commercial B. bifidum reduced tumour burden synergistically with therapy in a mouse model.
Article
Full-text available
A randomized placebo-controlled trial by Martí et al.¹ shows that probiotic supplementation of premature infants can modulate the infant gut microbiota soon after birth.
Article
Measuring scientific success has traditionally involved numbers and statistics. However, due to an increasingly uncertain world, more than ever we need to measure the effect that science has on real-world scenarios. We asked researchers to share their points of view on what scientific impact means to them and how impact matters beyond the numbers.
Article
Full-text available
There is emerging evidence that resident microbiota communities, that is, the microbiota, play a key role in cancer outcomes and anticancer responses. Although this has been relatively well studied in colorectal cancer and melanoma, other cancers, such as breast cancer (BrCa), have been largely overlooked to date. Importantly, many of the environme...
Chapter
Diet–microbe interactions play a crucial role in the early-life developmental window, exerting health effects in infancy that also extend to later life stages. Breastfeeding is the gold standard infant nutrition that is associated with healthy gut-associated microbial community development, optimal immune system maturation, and defense against path...
Article
Full-text available
Almost one third of Earth’s land surface is arid, with deserts alone covering more than 46 million square kilometres. Nearly 2.1 billion people inhabit deserts or drylands and these regions are also home to a great diversity of plant and animal species including many that are unique to them. Aridity is a multifaceted environmental stress combining...
Preprint
Full-text available
Two Gram-positive, anaerobic bacteria, designated 27733 and 27737, were isolated from a soft tissue infection from a human patient. They were preliminarily identified as Clostridium perfringens through a series of phenotypic tests, including Gram-staining, determination of lipase and hemolytic activities, MALDI-ToF profiling, and a commercial bioch...
Article
Full-text available
Fungi and the mycobiome are a fundamental part of the human microbiome that contributes to human health and development. Despite this, relatively little is known about the mycobiome of the preterm infant gut. Here, we have characterised faecal fungal communities present in 11 premature infants born with differing degrees of prematurity and mapped h...
Article
Full-text available
Supplementation with members of the early-life microbiota as “probiotics” is increasingly used in attempts to beneficially manipulate the preterm infant gut microbiota. We performed a large observational longitudinal study comprising two preterm groups: 101 infants orally supplemented with Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus (Bif/Lacto) and 133 infan...
Article
Full-text available
The underlying health-driving mechanisms of Bifidobacterium during early life are not well understood, particularly how this microbiota member may modulate the intestinal barrier via programming of intestinal epithelial cells (IECs). We investigated the impact of Bifidobacterium breve UCC2003 on the transcriptome of neonatal murine IECs. Small IECs...
Article
Full-text available
Diet-microbe interactions play a crucial role in modulation of the early life microbiota and infant health. Bifidobacterium dominates the breast-fed infant gut and may persist in individuals during transition from a milk-based to a more diversified diet. Here, we investigated adaptation of B. longum to the changing nutritional environment. Genomic...
Article
Full-text available
The neonatal developmental window represents a key time for establishment of the gut microbiota. First contact with these microbes within the infant gastrointestinal tract signifies the start of a critical mutualistic relationship, which is central for short- and longer-term health. Recent research has provided insights into the origin of these mic...
Article
Full-text available
Klebsiella spp. are frequently enriched in the gut microbiota of preterm neonates, and overgrowth is associated with necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), nosocomial infections and late-onset sepsis. Little is known about the genomic and phenotypic characteristics of preterm-associated Klebsiella, as previous studies have focused on the recovery of anti...
Article
Full-text available
Evidence supports associations between human gut microbiome variation and multiple health outcomes and diseases. Despite compelling results from in vivo and in vitro models, few findings have been translated into an understanding of modifiable causal relationships. Furthermore, epidemiological studies have been unconvincing in their ability to offe...
Article
Full-text available
The early life gut microbiota plays a crucial role in regulating and maintaining the intestinal barrier, with disturbances in these communities linked to dysregulated renewal and replenishment of intestinal epithelial cells. Here we sought to determine pathological cell shedding outcomes throughout the postnatal developmental period, and which host...
Article
Full-text available
Evidence supports associations between human gut microbiome variation and multiple health outcomes and diseases. Despite compelling results from in vivo and in vitro models, few findings have been translated into an understanding of modifiable causal relationships. Furthermore, epidemiological studies have been unconvincing in their ability to offe...
Preprint
Full-text available
Bifidobacterium is an important gut microbiota member during early life that is associated with improved gut health. However, the underlying health-driving mechanisms are not well understood, particularly how Bifidobacterium may modulate the intestinal barrier via programming of intestinal epithelial cells (IECs). In this study, we sought to invest...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Bifidobacterium represents an important early life microbiota member. Specific bifidobacterial components, exopolysaccharides (EPS), positively modulate host responses, with purified EPS also suggested to impact microbe-microbe interactions by acting as a nutrient substrate. Thus, we determined the longitudinal effects of bifidobacteri...
Preprint
Full-text available
The diverse community of commensal microbes that comprise the gut microbiota is known to play an integral role in human health, not least through its ability to regulate host immune responses and metabolic pathways. Alterations to the homeostasis of this community, including through the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics, have already been associate...
Article
Full-text available
The MinION sequencing platform offers near real-time analysis of DNA sequence; this makes the tool attractive for deployment in fieldwork or clinical settings. We used the MinION platform coupled to the NanoOK RT software package to perform shotgun metagenomic sequencing and profile mock communities and faecal samples from healthy and ill preterm i...
Preprint
Diet-microbe interactions play a crucial role in infant development and modulation of the early-life microbiota. The genus Bifidobacterium dominates the breast-fed infant gut, with strains of B. longum subsp. longum (B. longum) and B. longum subsp. infantis (B. infantis) particularly prevalent. Although transition from milk to a more diversified di...
Article
Full-text available
The human microbiome is an important emergent area of cross, multi and transdisciplinary study. The complexity of this topic leads to conflicting narratives and regulatory challenges. It raises questions about the benefits of its commercialisation and drives debates about alternative models for engaging with its publics, patients and other potentia...

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