High-fat feeding rather than obesity drives taxonomical and functional changes in the gut microbiota in mice/Experiment 1/Signature 1

From BugSigDB
Reviewed Marked as Reviewed by Chloe on 2021/08/9

Curated date: 2021/01/10

Curator: Shaimaa Elsafoury

Revision editor(s): Lwaldron, WikiWorks

Source: Data S4,S7,S8,S9,S10,S11,S13,S14

Description: Relative abundance at the bacterial phylum, genus and species levesl between two strain mices fed low fat diet, fed high fat diet and high fat diet + indomethacin

Abundance in Group 1: increased abundance in Sv129- Low Fat

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Anaerotruncus
Bacteroides
Blautia
Butyrivibrio
Butyrivibrio proteoclasticus
Chloroflexota
Clostridium
Hungatella hathewayi CAG:224
Cyanobacteriota
Dorea
Enterococcus faecalis
Eubacterium
Euryarchaeota
Faecalibacterium
Bacillota
Fusobacteriota
Lachnospiraceae bacterium 7_1_58FAA
Lactobacillus
Ligilactobacillus animalis
Marvinbryantia formatexigens
Oscillibacter
Oscillibacter valericigenes
Planctomycetota
Pseudoflavonifractor
Pseudoflavonifractor capillosus
Roseburia
Roseburia intestinalis
Roseburia inulinivorans
Ruminococcus
Spirochaetota
Subdoligranulum
Synergistota
Thermotogota
[Clostridium] hylemonae
[Clostridium] scindens
Candidatus Arthromitus sp. SFB-mouse

Revision editor(s): Lwaldron, WikiWorks