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The virota and its transkingdom interactions in the healthy infant gut.

Leen BellerWard DeboutteSara Vieira-SilvaGwen FalonyRaul Yhossef TitoLeen RymenansClaude Kwe YindaBert VanmechelenLore Van EspenDaan JansenChenyan ShiMark ZellerPiet MaesKaroline FaustMarc Van RanstJeroen RaesJelle Matthijnssens
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
SignificanceMicrobes colonizing the infant gut during the first year(s) of life play an important role in immune system development. We show that after birth the (nearly) sterile gut is rapidly colonized by bacteria and their viruses (phages), which often show a strong cooccurrence. Most viruses infecting the infant do not cause clinical signs and their numbers strongly increase after day-care entrance. The infant diet is clearly reflected by identification of plant-infecting viruses, whereas fungi and parasites are not part of a stable gut microbiota. These temporal high-resolution baseline data about the gut colonization process will be valuable for further investigations of pathogenic viruses, dynamics between phages and their bacterial host, as well as studies investigating infants with a disturbed microbiota.
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