0000000000207831

AUTHOR

Peer Bork

0000-0002-2627-833x

showing 3 related works from this author

Bacterial antisense RNAs are mainly the product of transcriptional noise

2015

Most of the antisense transcripts in bacteria are the product of transcriptional noise derived from spurious promoters.

0301 basic medicineTranscription GeneticBacterial antisense RNAs030106 microbiologyinformation scienceBiologyGenomeTranscriptome03 medical and health sciencesSpecies SpecificityTranscription (biology)medicineLife Sciencenatural sciencesRNA AntisenseSystems and Synthetic BiologyResearch ArticlesGeneticsBiomoleculesMessenger RNASysteem en Synthetische BiologieMultidisciplinaryRNASciAdv r-articlesPromotersocial sciencesmedicine.diseaseequipment and supplieshealth care quality access and evaluationChloroplastRNA BacterialCardiovascular and Metabolic Diseasesbacterial antisense RNAsRNATranscriptomeTranscriptional noiseResearch ArticleScience Advances
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Gut microbiota differs between children with Inflammatory Bowel Disease and healthy siblings in taxonomic and functional composition: a metagenomic a…

2017

Current treatment for pediatric inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients is often ineffective, with serious side effects. Manipulating the gut microbiota via fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is an emerging treatment approach but remains controversial. We aimed to assess the composition of the fecal microbiome through a comparison of pediatric IBD patients to their healthy siblings, evaluating risks and prospects for FMT in this setting. A case-control (sibling) study was conducted analyzing fecal samples of six children with Crohn’s disease (CD), six children with ulcerative colitis (UC) and 12 healthy siblings by metagenomic sequencing. In addition, lifetime antibiotic intake was r…

0301 basic medicineMaleAdolescentPhysiologyGut floraMicrobial dysbiosisInflammatory bowel disease03 medical and health sciencesFecesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicinePhysiology (medical)medicineHumansMicrobiomeSiblingIntestinal MucosaChildHepatologybiologyShotgun sequencingSiblingsGastroenterologymedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classification16S ribosomal RNAInflammatory Bowel DiseasesGastrointestinal Microbiome030104 developmental biologyMetagenomicsCardiovascular and Metabolic DiseasesImmunologyMetagenome030211 gastroenterology & hepatologyFemaleAmerican journal of physiology. Gastrointestinal and liver physiology
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Pole-to-Pole Connections: Similarities between Arctic and Antarctic Microbiomes and Their Vulnerability to Environmental Change

2017

The global biogeography of microorganisms remains poorly resolved, which limits the current understanding of microbial resilience toward environmental changes. Using high-throughput 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing, we characterized the microbial diversity of terrestrial and lacustrine biofilms from the Arctic, Antarctic and temperate regions. Our analyses suggest that bacterial community compositions at the poles are more similar to each other than they are to geographically closer temperate habitats, with 32% of all operational taxonomic units (OTUs) co-occurring in both polar regions. While specific microbial taxa were confined to distinct regions, representing potentially endemic popul…

lcsh:QH540-549.5microbiologypolar regionslcsh:Evolutionlcsh:QH359-425high-throughput sequencinglcsh:EcologyecologybiogeographydiversityFrontiers in Ecology and Evolution
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