articleProceedings of the National Academy of SciencesSep 16, 2010Closed access

Incomplete recovery and individualized responses of the human distal gut microbiota to repeated antibiotic perturbation

Stanford University · VA Palo Alto Health Care System

PubMed
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Abstract

The indigenous human microbiota is essential to the health of the host. Although the microbiota can be affected by many features of modern life, we know little about its responses to disturbance, especially repeated disturbances, and how these changes compare with baseline temporal variation. We examined the distal gut microbiota of three individuals over 10 mo that spanned two courses of the antibiotic ciprofloxacin, analyzing more than 1.7 million bacterial 16S rRNA hypervariable region sequences from 52 to 56 samples per subject. Interindividual variation was the major source of variability between samples. Day-to-day temporal variability was evident but constrained around an average community composition…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Gut flora
  • Biology
  • Antibiotics
  • Microbiome
  • Ciprofloxacin
  • Hypervariable region
  • Physiology
  • Zoology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life in Land
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