News

Weizmann scientists uncover why our immune system lets us eat without harm, how it tolerates food—and why it sometimes fails.
Fecal microbiota transplants (FMT) have been touted as a potential treatment for a variety of conditions, from inflammatory ...
Chronic inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), such as Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, cause recurring diarrhea, fever, ...
Cancer remains one of the major global health threats. Tumors are not only influenced by gut microbiota but can also actively ...
Timeline of sample collection from the peri-implant sulcus following two-stage dental implant placement, highlighting the ...
Gut microbiota are associated with essential various biological functions in humans through a “network” of microbial–host co-metabolism to process nutrients and drugs and modulate the activities of ...
Consumption of only wild foods induces large scale, partially persistent alterations to the gut microbiome - ...
A new study reveals that microbial diversity is shaped by a network of mutual dependencies. Microbial ecosystems are found all around us—in seawater, soil, and even inside the human gut—and they are ...
Living emulsions, which incorporate active bacteria into oil–water multiphase systems, represent an innovative integration of microbiology and colloid science. The active role of living species offers ...
Microorganisms play a foundational role in maintaining Earth's ecosystems by driving biogeochemical cycles, supporting plant and animal health, and ...
Enzyme activation by cellular metabolites plays a pivotal role in regulating metabolic processes. Nevertheless, our comprehension of such activation events on a global network scale remains incomplete ...