{"_id":"6NGCsS8oteLpWcWSE","bibbaseid":"burcelin-regulationofmetabolismacrosstalkbetweengutmicrobiotaanditshumanhost-2012","downloads":0,"creationDate":"2017-03-10T15:23:32.737Z","title":"Regulation of Metabolism: A Cross Talk Between Gut Microbiota and Its Human Host","author_short":["Burcelin, R."],"year":2012,"bibtype":"article","biburl":null,"bibdata":{"title":"Regulation of Metabolism: A Cross Talk Between Gut Microbiota and Its Human Host","type":"article","year":"2012","identifiers":"[object Object]","pages":"300-307","volume":"27","websites":"http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23026753,http://physiologyonline.physiology.org/cgi/doi/10.1152/physiol.00023.2012","month":"10","day":"1","id":"7d15bf84-7933-3ba9-b908-97824c855db6","created":"2017-03-10T13:56:16.000Z","accessed":"2017-03-10","file_attached":false,"profile_id":"f95ef69b-8f96-32da-8de9-769c2acf0685","group_id":"0ef73a44-75e8-35f5-b04a-84a4f9258e52","last_modified":"2017-03-10T13:57:34.000Z","read":false,"starred":false,"authored":false,"confirmed":false,"hidden":false,"folder_uuids":"828769d4-4165-4191-b8d1-200c6367a61f","abstract":"The recent epidemic of obesity and diabetes and the diversity at the individual level could be explained by the intestinal microbiota-to-host relationship. More than four million gene products from the microbiome could interact with the immune system to induce a tissue metabolic infection, which is the molecular origin of the low-grade inflammation that characterizes the onset of obesity and diabetes.","bibtype":"article","author":"Burcelin, R.","journal":"Physiology","number":"5","bibtex":"@article{\n title = {Regulation of Metabolism: A Cross Talk Between Gut Microbiota and Its Human Host},\n type = {article},\n year = {2012},\n identifiers = {[object Object]},\n pages = {300-307},\n volume = {27},\n websites = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23026753,http://physiologyonline.physiology.org/cgi/doi/10.1152/physiol.00023.2012},\n month = {10},\n day = {1},\n id = {7d15bf84-7933-3ba9-b908-97824c855db6},\n created = {2017-03-10T13:56:16.000Z},\n accessed = {2017-03-10},\n file_attached = {false},\n profile_id = {f95ef69b-8f96-32da-8de9-769c2acf0685},\n group_id = {0ef73a44-75e8-35f5-b04a-84a4f9258e52},\n last_modified = {2017-03-10T13:57:34.000Z},\n read = {false},\n starred = {false},\n authored = {false},\n confirmed = {false},\n hidden = {false},\n folder_uuids = {828769d4-4165-4191-b8d1-200c6367a61f},\n abstract = {The recent epidemic of obesity and diabetes and the diversity at the individual level could be explained by the intestinal microbiota-to-host relationship. More than four million gene products from the microbiome could interact with the immune system to induce a tissue metabolic infection, which is the molecular origin of the low-grade inflammation that characterizes the onset of obesity and diabetes.},\n bibtype = {article},\n author = {Burcelin, R.},\n journal = {Physiology},\n number = {5}\n}","author_short":["Burcelin, R."],"urls":{"Website":"http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23026753,http://physiologyonline.physiology.org/cgi/doi/10.1152/physiol.00023.2012"},"bibbaseid":"burcelin-regulationofmetabolismacrosstalkbetweengutmicrobiotaanditshumanhost-2012","role":"author","downloads":0},"search_terms":["regulation","metabolism","cross","talk","between","gut","microbiota","human","host","burcelin"],"keywords":[],"authorIDs":[]}