Amish (Rural) vs. non-Amish (Urban) Infant Fecal Microbiotas Are Highly Diverse and Their Transplantation Lead to Differences in Mucosal Immune Maturation in a Humanized Germfree Piglet Model | Semantic Scholar Skip to search formSkip to main content> Semantic Scholar's Logo Search Sign InCreate Free Account You are currently offline. Some features of the site may not work correctly. DOI:10.3389/fimmu.2019.01509 Corpus ID: 196810523Amish (Rural) vs. non-Amish (Urban) Infant Fecal Microbiotas Are Highly Diverse and Their Transplantation Lead to Differences in Mucosal Immune Maturation in a Humanized Germfree Piglet Model @article{Dhakal2019AmishV, title={Amish (Rural) vs. non-Amish (Urban) Infant Fecal Microbiotas Are Highly Diverse and Their Transplantation Lead to Differences in Mucosal Immune Maturation in a Humanized Germfree Piglet Model}, author={S. Dhakal and L. Wang and L. Antony and Jennifer Rank and Pauline Bernardo and Shristi Ghimire and Kathy Bondra and Christina Siems and Yashavanth Shaan Lakshmanappa and S. Renu and Bradley T. Hogshead and S. Krakowka and Mike Kauffman and J. Scaria and J. Lejeune and Z. Yu and G. Renukaradhya}, journal={Frontiers in Immunology}, year={2019}, volume={10} } S. Dhakal, L. Wang, +14 authors G. Renukaradhya Published 2019 Biology, Medicine Frontiers in Immunology The gut microbiome plays an important role in the immune system development, maintenance of normal health status, and in disease progression. In this study, we comparatively examined the fecal microbiomes of Amish (rural) and non-Amish (urban) infants and investigated how they could affect the mucosal immune maturation in germ-free piglets that were inoculated with the two types of infant fecal microbiota (IFM). Differences in microbiome diversity and structure were noted between the two types… Expand View on PubMed frontiersin.org Save to Library Create Alert Cite Launch Research Feed Share This Paper 8 CitationsHighly Influential Citations 1 Background Citations 4 View All Figures, Tables, and Topics from this paper table 1 figure 1 table 2 figure 2 figure 3 table 3 figure 4 figure 4 table 4 figure 5 figure 6 figure 7 View All 12 Figures & Tables Microbiota (plant) Microbiota (environment) Feces Mucous Membrane lymph nodes Immune system Fecal Microbiota Transplantation Anatomical maturation Metagenomics Intestinal Microbiome Intestines Phylum (taxon) Fecal occult blood test Submucosa Biologic Development Progressive Disease Paper Mentions News Article Convivir con animales refuerza nuestras defensas La Vanguardia 3 October 2019 News Article Cuddling with farm animals can help young kids develop healthier immune systems Bangor Daily News 5 August 2019 News Article How Babies Benefit From Exposure To Farm Animals Medical Daily 26 July 2019 News Article Baby's Immune System May Be Boosted by Keeping Livestock at Home Technology Networks 25 July 2019 News Article Why growing up on a farm is good for your immune system Mother Nature Network 24 July 2019 News Article Early exposure to farm animals may lead to robust immune system development The Medical News 23 July 2019 News Article Keeping Livestock in the Yard Might Help Your Baby's Immune System Infection Control Today 23 July 2019 News Article Keeping Livestock in the Yard Just Might Help Your Baby’s Immune System Environmental News Network 23 July 2019 SHOW MORE 8 Citations Citation Type Citation Type All Types Cites Results Cites Methods Cites Background Has PDF Publication Type Author More Filters More Filters Filters Sort by Relevance Sort by Most Influenced Papers Sort by Citation Count Sort by Recency Impact of Microbiota Transplant on Resistome of Gut Microbiota in Gnotobiotic Piglets and Human Subjects H. 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