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Flashcards in Microbiome (Jenney) Deck (61)
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1
Q

What are 2 things that microbiota can affect in us?

A

Behavior and brain development

2
Q

All microorganisms inhabiting our body, including viruses, porkaryotes (bacteria & archaea), protozoa, and fungi are known as what?

A

Microbiota

3
Q

About how many cells make up the human microbiota

A

10^18

4
Q

The gut microbiota can be considered what?

A

A pseudo-organ, with a mass approximately the same as the liver

5
Q

Full complement of all proteins is?

A

Proteome

6
Q

Full complement of sugars/glycoproteins is?

A

Glyco(proteo)me

7
Q

Full complement of kinases is?

A

Kinome

8
Q

All metals found in an organism make up the?

A

Metallome

9
Q

All the metalloproteins are found where?

A

Metalloproteome

10
Q

All possible mRNA transcripts are found where?

A

Transcriptome

11
Q

Complete coding region of a genome (exons filtered out of a whole genome DNA sequence) is known as the?

A

Exome

12
Q

Genes from all possible microbes living in a particular niche (e.g. intestinal microbiota) make up the?

A

Microbiome

13
Q

New field created to analyze data involving proteomes, exomes, microbiomes, etc. is called?

A

Bioinformatics

14
Q

Complete genetic material (DNA) of an organism is called?

A

Genome

15
Q

It is estimated that there are about how many unique genes in the human microbiome, as opposed to the human genome?

A

100 times more (genome has 20,000)

16
Q

Where are human gut microbiota located?

A

Clusters differ in different regions of the GI tract.

17
Q

Microbiota specific to a tissue/region are known as?

A

Local microbiota

18
Q

Microbiota representing the community common to a population are known as?

A

Core microbiota

19
Q

Pool of genes found commonly in a community is known as?

A

Core metagenome

20
Q

Mobile genetic elements in the microbiota which can transfer antibiotic resistance genes make up the?

A

Mobile metagenome

21
Q

All metabolism performed by the microbiota is known as?

A

Metabolome

22
Q

All gene transcripts of the metagenome are examined using what?

A

Metatranscriptomics

23
Q

All expressed proteins in the metagenome are examined using what?

A

Metaproteonomics

24
Q

What microbacteria make up about 80% of the gut?

A

Clostridia, eubacteria, bacteroides

25
Q

What lab techniques are used to study the diversity of the microbiota?

A
FISH
T-RFLP
Real-Time PCR
Phylogenetic microarray
Pyrosequencing
26
Q

The metagenome of _____ _____ is a key aspect of human health.

A

GI tract

27
Q

What are some problems encountered with studying the GI tract?

A
Contamination
Artifacts
Sampling
Spatial/temporal variability
Standardization
28
Q

Metagenomics is leading to a new field, which is designed to identify the genetic determinants involved in the health promoting effects of probiotic bacteria. What is this field called?

A

Probiogenomics

29
Q

Why should we care about probiogenomics?

A

There are clear shifts in microbiota in diseased states. Research has shown that there are clear differences in human microbiota in healthy vs. ill individuals

30
Q

Clusters of bacterial species that are shared among different groups of people are known as what?

A

Enterotypes

31
Q

What serves as an important potential source of diagnostic biomarkers, 12 bacterial genes that significantly correlate with human age and 3 functional modules (groups of genes) that correlate with BMI?

A

Enterotypes

32
Q

What is an abnormal microbial ecosystem in the host known as?

A

Dysbiosis

33
Q

What does dysbiosis correlate with?

A

Cause and progression of disease states e.g. obesity, diabetes, IBS, some GI tract cancers

34
Q

When treating a patient and his/her microbiota, what are you actually treating?

A

Microecological disease

35
Q

What are permanent residents of the microbiota that have the potential to induce pathology?

A

Pathobionts

36
Q

What do colostrum and breast milk contain that are believed to define some of the early responses infants have to commensals? What do they do?

A

Live microbes, metabolites, IgA, immune cells, cytokines - these factors synergize to shape the breast-fed infant microbiota and the response of the host to these microbes.

37
Q

The presence of what in the mother’s milk promotes expansion of defined constituents of the microbiota, such as Bifidobacterium?

A

Metabolites, including oligosaccharides

38
Q

The developing immune system is characterized by what type of cell production and development in favor of regulatory responses?

A

Blunted inflammatory cytokine production

Skewed T & B cell development

39
Q

What is a consequence of the developing state of the immune system?

A

High susceptibility to infections

40
Q

Recent reports reveal that what contributes to maintenance of immunoregulatory environment and limits mucosal inflammation following colonization with microbiota in the neonate?

A

Defined population of erythroid cells

41
Q

What do neonate innate cells express that unlike in adults has a notable impairment in production of inflammatory mediators, e.g. oxygen radicals and heightened production of regulatory cytokines like IL-10?

A

TLR ligands

42
Q

Other than the immune system, what are gut bacteria also an important factor for the development of?

A

Gut structure

43
Q

Microbiota play a critical role in what kind of structure development, specifically?

A

Lymphoid

44
Q

The capacity of the microbiota to stimulate innate responses translates into its important role in the induction of what kind of immunity?

A

Adaptive

45
Q

Early studies have indicated what kind of host immune responses to pathogens in mice treated with antibiotics or raised in germ-free conditions?

A

Significantly impaired

46
Q

What toxins do GAS bacteria release that can generate ER stress that upregulates the expression of asparagine synthetase and increases production of asparagine?

A
Streptolysin O (SLO)
Streptolysin S (SLS)
47
Q

What happens as a result of upregulated ASN production due to a GAS infection?

A

Gene expression of the bacteria and an increased rate of its growth

48
Q

What kind of immune responses have been shown to be influenced by the intestinal microbiota?

A

Mucosal and systemic

49
Q

Research was done in which a diet enriched in 5% acidic oligosaccharides derived from pectin (pAOS) was given to mice with chronic P. aeruginosa infections. What happened to lung bacterial clearance in the mice after the first and second P aeruginosa infections?

A

It increased

50
Q

Microbiota interactions in infancy may be critical determinants of what?

A

Long-term host metabolic effects

51
Q

What does LDP exposure enhance?

A

HFD metabolic effects, which can be transmissible by transferring the microbiota

52
Q

What has research recently begun to show in terms of bacteria and cancer?

A

That bacteria can drive tumor growth, and their interaction with the immune system can further fuel cancer progression, especially at mucosal interfaces where bacteria are abundant and the immune system is highly reactive

53
Q

What gut bacterial metabolite can directly cause DNA damage and, in turn, promote tumor development?

A

Deoxycholic acid (DCA)

54
Q

What bacterium has been shown to directly promote intestinal tumorigenesis when its adhesin, FadA, binds to E-cadherin on epithelial cells and activates beta-catenin signaling to promote epithelial cell proliferation?

A

Fusobacterium nucleatum

55
Q

What is an indirect mechanism by which bacteria promote tumor growth?

A

Chronic activation of the immune system

56
Q

What can microbiota increase that can induce triglyceride production in the liver? This is also associated with greater adiposity and reduced glucose tolerance.

A

Serum levels of glucose and SCFAS

57
Q

What does gut microbiota regulate that regulates fatty acid oxidation in both muscle and adipose tissue?

A

Angiopoietin-like protein 4 (Angptl4/Fiaf - fasting-induced adipose factor)

58
Q

What can gut bacteria do regarding inflammation and insulin resistance associated with obesity, possibly via LPS?

A

Initiate it

59
Q

What kind of effect has been shown in germ-free mice regarding obesity?

A

Bacteria may play a role in weight gain; germ free mice who were given gut bacteria from normal mice dramatically put on weight within 10-14 days

60
Q

What kind of transplant is now being performed for patients infected with a virulent, basically non-treatable strain of C. diff?

A

Fecal - from individuals with healthy gut bacteria

61
Q

What systems are affected by microbiota?

A
Intestinal
Exocrine
Vascular
Endocrine
Infection
Immunity
Epithelia
Morphology
Metabolism
Nutrional
Hepatic