A study aims to determine whether restoring a healthy intestinal environment can make drugs used in the treatment of ...
In a study that identified male chromosome genetic material in the intestines of female patients undergoing fecal transplants, researchers say they have significantly expanded scientific understanding ...
In a novel study that identified male chromosome genetic material in the intestines of female patients undergoing fecal ...
A group of researchers, coordinated by Luigi Nezi from the European Institute of Oncology (IEO), in collaboration with ...
Researchers discovered that male chromosomes persist in female patients' intestines following fecal transplants. This suggests that donor intestinal cells, not just microbiota, may enhance treatment ...
Scientists have uncovered how certain E. coli bacteria in the gut promote colon cancer by binding to intestinal cells and ...
Our study suggests the possibility of donor intestinal epithelial cell transfer during fecal microbiota transplant, rather than the mere transfer of bacteria from donor fecal samples, can be more ...
New research from reveals that the gut microbiome regulates the body’s diurnal (day-night) rhythms in stress hormones.
One of the suspected cancer-promoting bacteria is pks+ E. coli, which produces a genotoxin called ‘colibactin’. Colibactin is capable of binding and damaging human DNA, causing mutations that can ...