Precocious infant fecal microbiome promotes enterocyte barrier dysfuction, altered neuroendocrine signaling and associates with increased childhood obesity risk

Yong, G. J. M., Porsche, C. E., Sitarik, A. R., Fujimura, K. E., McCauley, K., Nguyen, D. T., Levin, A. M., Woodcroft, K. J., Ownby, D. R., Rundle, A. G., Johnson, C. C., Cassidy-Bushrow, A., & Lynch, S. V. (2023). Precocious infant fecal microbiome promotes enterocyte barrier dysfuction, altered neuroendocrine signaling and associates with increased childhood obesity risk. Gut Microbes, 16(1). https://doi.org/10.1080/19490976.2023.2290661
Authors:
Germaine J M Yong
Cara E Porsche
Alexandra R Sitarik
Kei E Fujimura
Kathryn McCauley
Dat T Nguyen
Albert M Levin
Kimberley J Woodcroft
Dennis R Ownby
Andrew G Rundle
Christine C Johnson
Andrea Cassidy-Bushrow
Susan V Lynch
Affiliated Authors:
Andrew G Rundle
Author Keywords:
early life
gut microbiome
nutrition
childhood obesity
gut barrier dysfunction
Publication Type:
Article
Unique ID:
10.1080/19490976.2023.2290661
PMID:
Journal:
Publication Date:
Data Source:
PubMed

Record Created: