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1 cci species, are present in human intestinal flora.
2 his high-mountain ecosystem with its endemic flora.
3 ember of the gastrointestinal and/or vaginal flora.
4 nx, and vagina all have associated commensal flora.
5 ated with the presence of normal respiratory flora.
6 ntially shape the composition of the natural flora.
7 for colonization with the normal respiratory flora.
8  without harming healthy commensal microbial flora.
9 g' through the expansion in range of various flora.
10 n in an agar plate experiment of respiratory flora.
11  CXCL2 expression similar to the normal oral flora.
12 ould not inhibit growth of natural bacterial flora.
13 rging pattern in the evolution of the global flora.
14 ct domestic agriculture and native fauna and flora.
15 al pathogen found as part of the normal oral flora.
16 common component of the human skin microbial flora.
17 f different honey types belonging to Turkish flora.
18  including terrestrial and aquatic fauna and flora.
19 nd their putative effects on local fauna and flora.
20 ice in the presence or absence of intestinal flora.
21 matically detected in samples with anaerobic flora.
22 ther infectious bacteria, host and human gut flora.
23 nderstanding the nature of the earliest land flora.
24 f IAP (cIAP) rapidly restores the normal gut flora.
25 e important for the development of anaerobic flora.
26  drug targets that may also affect human gut flora.
27 heir expansion is regulated by commensal gut flora.
28 etrimental effect of its commensal bacterial flora.
29 ficant alteration from baseline conjunctival flora.
30 re highly affected by the resident microbial flora.
31  degradation pathway is present in human gut flora.
32  P </= .01), with most concordant for normal flora.
33 and symbiotic relationships with mycorrhizal flora.
34 ce mechanisms in response to the normal oral flora.
35 orrelated with patient's ocular conjunctival flora.
36 all samples, predominantly reflecting normal flora.
37 bly conserved low diversity of gut microbial flora.
38 ance or a discernible change in conjunctival flora.
39 gnized a substantial part of the neotropical flora.
40 at is permissive for the growth of competing flora.
41 ient absorption, and the effect of microbial flora.
42 ents (46%) had culture positive conjunctival flora.
43 ractions among the liver, intestine, and its flora.
44 ing against CAC in response to the commensal flora.
45 5/6 in mediating immune tolerance to the gut flora.
46 itis risk, particularly attributable to oral flora.
47 tar contributions of the acacia-accompanying flora.
48 ffecting the representation of the catchment flora.
49 s a possibility of maintaining a healthy gut flora.
50 nflammatory factors in response to commensal flora.
51 gies that are underrepresented in the native flora.
52 has been used to reconstruct late-Quaternary floras.
53 ontribution to reconstructions of Quaternary floras.
54 2% versus 27.7%) and with normal respiratory flora (52.0% versus 43.0%) and were less likely to be ne
55 lithocholic acid, a by-product of intestinal flora, activate pregnane X receptor (PXR) and subsequent
56  of the rise angiosperm-dominated herbaceous floras (ADHFs) is lacking.
57 o growth, 47.1% contained normal respiratory flora alone (including yeast), and 0.6% contained mycoba
58 tobacillus spp. are part of the normal human flora and are generally assumed to be nonpathogenic.
59 inflammatory signals induced by both the gut flora and arthritis, Breg cells increase in number and r
60  contain smaller quantities of oropharyngeal flora and be more likely to have a predominance of poten
61                                DCs sense gut flora and damaged epithelium via expression of C-type le
62 ic non-infectious diseases, where intestinal flora and endotoxemia play a role.
63 imal development is dependent upon commensal flora and expression of the nonpolymorphic MHC class I-l
64 on for the International Trade of Endangered Flora and Fauna (CITES) treaty; (2) assess the origin an
65 ggered Younger Dryas changes in temperature, flora and fauna assemblages, and human adaptations.
66 emoides monilifera ssp. rotundata) on native flora and fauna in a eucalypt forest in south-eastern Au
67 egregation, to the heterogeneous patterns of flora and fauna observed by urban ecologists.
68 gion; a common biogeographic barrier for the flora and fauna of California.
69 to more and more remote regions, much of the flora and fauna of the world are experiencing evolutiona
70 any models to explain the differences in the flora and fauna of tropical and temperate regions assume
71      The Neotropics harbour the most diverse flora and fauna on Earth.
72 ustrates the vulnerability of desert wetland flora and fauna to abrupt climate change.
73 how that climate change forced a turnover of flora and fauna, suggesting there was a change from larg
74 ridors are needed to enable the dispersal of flora and fauna.
75 the mammalian pests that threaten its unique flora and fauna.
76 fecting the terrestrial, aquatic, and aerial flora and fauna.
77 ronments, disrupting original communities of flora and fauna.
78 practices have impacted the evolution of its flora and fauna.
79 chronic and acute harmful effects on natural flora and fauna.
80 isolation of low quantities of oropharyngeal flora and higher prevalence of potential pathogens as ma
81 calorie-enriched OBD interact with microbial flora and impact leukocyte profiling is currently under
82 l infection of the midgut requires bacterial flora and is inhibited by the activities of immune defic
83 Studies have shown that probiotics alter gut flora and lead to elaboration of flora metabolites that
84 t-brain axis and an impact of the intestinal flora and meningeal IL-17(+) gammadelta T cells on ische
85 plate as contaminated or growing only normal flora and not due to threshold counts.
86  a mechanism independent both of the enteric flora and of interferon gamma, a key cytokine for the re
87 nce of a group of bacteria in the intestinal flora and relapse/progression of disease after allo-HCT.
88 rtant links between the intestinal commensal flora and sleep-generating mechanisms in the brain.
89  that provides the habitat for the commensal flora and the inner mucous layer that protects the epith
90 omic similarity between the native and alien flora and the total number of recorded associations (a m
91 ed home-based screening for abnormal vaginal flora and urinary tract infections.
92 nection of previously independently evolving floras and faunas is thought to be one of the key factor
93 cies will continue to accumulate in regional floras and faunas, or whether the pace of accumulation w
94 ueness and the evolutionary history of their flora, and because they are a source of "option values"
95 toring cutaneous barrier function, microbial flora, and immune homeostasis but also enhancing skin ep
96      Orchids are a key element of the Andean flora, and one of the most prominent components of the N
97 h human is colonized by a distinct bacterial flora, and that the microbiota can be manipulated to red
98 an health, and alterations of the normal gut flora are associated with a variety of distinct disease
99 reviously that alterations in the intestinal flora are associated with GVHD, bacteremia, and reduced
100 rse forms of today's dominant vascular plant flora are generated by the sustained proliferative activ
101 nce is presented which shows that the normal flora are maintained on a diet of salivary factors inclu
102 nt species comprising the present-day Arctic flora are thought to have originated in the high mountai
103                                       Island floras around the world thus reflect the role of a key r
104 a and then inoculated with altered Schaedler flora (ASF), a defined consortium of 8 bacteria with min
105 ) or mice colonized with altered Schaedler's flora (ASF).
106      There has been little research into the floras associated with karst in South America, most of w
107  by culture result, at final follow-up, oral flora-associated culture-positive cases lost 17.5 lines,
108 ure-positive cases lost 17.5 lines, non-oral flora-associated culture-positive cases lost 9.1 lines,
109                    However, no cases of oral flora-associated endophthalmitis occurred in the Face Ma
110                        Sixteen cases of oral flora-associated endophthalmitis were found in the No Ta
111 wth or viability of representative commensal flora at 50 muM.
112 etemcomitans was found at 0.13% of the total flora at baseline and at 0.05% 4 wk after inoculation.
113 imprints of these processes on the Galapagos flora by analysing a comprehensive regional phylogeny fo
114 ew, and pollen, which are collected from the flora by bees.
115           Finally, colonization of commensal flora by fecal material transplantation into germ-free S
116          Restoring the balance of intestinal flora by introducing probiotics for disease prevention a
117       OF the nine samples designated altered flora by Nugent, five were categorized BV positive and f
118 l swabs are negative but designated "altered flora" by BV Nugent score, leaving clinicians unsure how
119 is arid environment has favoured a resilient flora capable of large fluctuations in photosynthetic pr
120 morsus, a commensal bacterium of dog's mouth flora causing severe infections in humans after dog bite
121                           Using 19th-century flora censuses for 14 Danish regions as a baseline, we o
122  vaginosis (BV) is a perturbation of vaginal flora characterized by reduced levels of lactobacilli an
123 nt of honey produced from different types of flora (chestnut and highland) in the Senoz Valley.
124 nal Trade in Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora (CITES), including the whale shark (Rhincodon typu
125 rs phylogenetically distinct from the native flora (competition-relatedness hypothesis).
126 f DSS-challenged SAMP mice led to changes in flora composition without preventing the development of
127 moniae can become part of the nasopharyngeal flora, contributing to the severity of respiratory disea
128                            Thus, the enteric flora controls a reciprocal protection tradeoff in the v
129  assemblages with other encrusting fauna and flora (corraline algae), and are highly abundant across
130 pothesized that components of the intestinal flora could be associated with relapse after allo-HCT.
131                                       Native flora could promote this capability.
132 rtion of native mycorrhizal plants in island floras decreased with isolation, possibly as a consequen
133                                          Gut flora-depleted mice expressed lower levels of F4/80 and
134  control BM monocytes, BM monocytes from gut flora-depleted mice had decreased migratory capacity tow
135 ensity was level II~III (88.9%); the vaginal flora diversity was level II~III (72.2%); the predominan
136                                       Pollen floras document a Northern Gondwanan appearance of monos
137  significantly decreasing (-10.7%) and alien flora doubling (+132.1%) in richness.
138 rize differential contributions of dysbiotic flora during eczema formation, and highlight the microbi
139  that in avoiding exposure to maternal bowel flora during labour or vaginal birth, offspring delivere
140 ria, mainly lactococci, were the predominant flora during the early stages of ripening, gradually bei
141 ichness reveals a significantly more diverse flora during the late Miocene than today at the same lat
142 erstand why, among the vast diversity of gut flora, enterococci are so well adapted to the modern hos
143  small molecules provided by diet, commensal flora, environmental pollutants, and metabolism.
144 tenance of the composition of the intestinal flora, even after a moderate gluten challenge.
145 ifold evidence for a synchronous turnover of flora, fauna and climate at the Eocene-Oligocene Boundar
146 om dredging and can negatively impact marine flora, fauna, and ecosystems.
147 outhern European peninsulas were refugia for flora, fauna, and human groups.
148 ment of the future risks to the African palm flora, finding that African palm species on average may
149 f reads derived from human or nasopharyngeal flora for 88% and 91% of samples, respectively.
150 ssessment and manipulation of the intestinal flora for prevention and treatment of radiation, enterop
151 corrhizal fungi, epiphytic lichen and ground flora); for ecological condition (e.g. sward height, pal
152 pid transition among Mesozoic ecosystems and floras formerly dominated by ferns, conifers, and cycads
153 ent an inventory of the freshwater fauna and flora found in a sediment sample from the mummified Wool
154 cup showed no adverse effects on the vaginal flora (four studies, 507 women).
155 nabantidae) and a diverse subtropical fossil flora from the Chattian (late Oligocene) of central Tibe
156 ence(s) of some taxa in the modern fauna and flora giving new insights into the ecology and evolution
157 stablished that seaweed-affiliated bacterial flora had a wide-ranging antibacterial activities and po
158 ecent decades that an overview of the entire flora has become possible.
159 , on the interaction between these fauna and flora has not been identified or elucidated, yet influen
160                   In addition, the commensal flora have been shown to modulate immune processes relev
161 ntaining vaccines could affect the commensal flora have yet to be established.
162 pproximately the size of the native European flora, have become naturalized somewhere on the globe as
163                              The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the Doris Duke Charitable Foun
164 that are inherently incompatible with native flora, highlighting the importance of maintaining commen
165 as 58% in participants with abnormal vaginal flora (ie, abnormal vaginal flora resolved in 361 [58%]
166                 If present, abnormal vaginal flora (ie, Nugent score >=4 was treated with oral clinda
167 e the important contribution of host enteric flora in B. thuringiensis-killing activity and provide a
168 te transient as well as indigenous bacterial flora in gut-related dysbiosis of turtles.
169  of inflammatory 3D structures, genetics and flora in IBD.
170 icance, since manipulation of the intestinal flora in individuals with congenital biopterin deficienc
171         Here, we report that the normal oral flora in mice protects against inflammation-induced oste
172 investigated the effects of HFD on bacterial flora in the small intestine and NSAID-induced enteropat
173 grass subfamily Pooideae dominates the grass floras in cold temperate regions and has evolved complex
174                                The surviving floras in regions that experienced stronger extinction a
175 orrelated with taxonomic composition between floras in Yunnan.
176 des of acute cystitis associated with "mixed flora" in an elderly male following a cystoscopy.
177  influenced by the presence of commensal gut flora, in particular increased colonization with segment
178 LRP5/6(DeltaCD11c) mice by depleting the gut flora, indicating the importance of LRP5/6 in mediating
179 itoneal vaginoplasty, the artificial vaginal flora intensity was level II~III (88.9%); the vaginal fl
180                                 The raw milk flora is a major source of bacterial variety, starter cu
181         Approximately 50% of Mexican dryland flora is endemic and accompanied by ample local and trad
182 biotic-induced perturbation of the human gut flora is expected to play an important role in mediating
183 tantly, the presence of the midgut bacterial flora is required for full viral infectivity to Anophele
184 , where the presence of the midgut bacterial flora is required for protection against infection.
185                                   The global flora is thought to contain a large proportion of herbs,
186 the rich endemic diversity of oceanic island floras is important for our understanding of plant evolu
187 occus epidermidis, a major component of skin flora, is an opportunist, often causing prosthetic devic
188 on driven by dysbiotic subgingival bacterial flora, is linked on clinical levels to the development o
189 ations of approximately 1/3 of the Brazilian flora, it is not significantly more species-rich or rich
190 int of Primula vulgaris from William Curtis' Flora Londinensis, I was struck by the fact that I was l
191 factors, cross seeding and recolonization of flora may affect the outcome of periodontal therapy.
192 S. aureus and other members of the bacterial flora may determine colonization and have been inferred
193                         Intestinal bacterial flora may induce splanchnic hemodynamic and histological
194 ce mechanisms in response to the normal oral flora, mediating catabolic alveolar bone homeostasis in
195 s alter gut flora and lead to elaboration of flora metabolites that influence health through 1 of 3 g
196             Association of altered Schaedler flora mice with B. ovatus specifically increased Th17 ce
197 stinal parasitic helminths and the microbial flora (microbiota) inhabiting the host gut.
198 ic gene is prevalent among non-meningococcal flora, most likely Neisseria commensals.
199 pecies combined with conventional intestinal flora obtained from the gastrointestinal tract of health
200 collapse of the austral Permian Glossopteris flora occurred prior to 252.3 Ma (~370 kyrs before the m
201        By analyzing the whole-body bacterial flora of An. gambiae mosquitoes from Burkina Faso by 16
202 thirty volumes of Flora of North America and Flora of China combined, in addition to some smaller dat
203  The United States contains a diverse native flora of CWR, including those of important cereal, fruit
204 and may affect both pathogens and the normal flora of different mucosal sites.IMPORTANCE Sialic acids
205 we aimed to investigate the midgut bacterial flora of different populations of P. papatasi.
206 taphylococcus aureus are part of the natural flora of humans and other mammals.
207  data for >7,500 seed plant species from the flora of Java with >16,500 secondary metabolites and 6,2
208                                   Across the flora of Java, we identify 26 "hot clades" with plant sp
209                                The bacterial flora of nasogastric feeding tubes and faecal samples we
210 ion and community dominance using the alpine flora of New Zealand.
211 e the terms extracted from thirty volumes of Flora of North America and Flora of China combined, in a
212 ant family that is today endemic to the Cape flora of South Africa.
213 rom the 52-million-year-old Laguna del Hunco flora of southern Argentina.
214 and the formation of hybrids, drawing on the flora of the British Isles for insight.
215                                   The alpine flora of the Hengduan Mountains has continuously existed
216  for a better understanding of the microbial flora of the human intestine, as well as dissection of t
217                                   The normal flora of the oropharynx may be an important source of an
218           Here, following Darwin, we use the flora of the United States to examine patterns of taxono
219    This is the first report of gut bacterial flora of wild-caught P. papatasi collected in an endemic
220 senting three of the most complete digitized floras of the world: Australia (AU), South Africa (SA),
221 ce mechanisms in response to the normal oral flora on alveolar bone height.
222 sly existed far longer than any other alpine flora on Earth and illustrates how modern biotas have be
223  to mediate the stimulatory influence of the flora on myeloid cell longevity.
224 orts to fully digitize and mobilize regional floras online offer a timely opportunity to assess commo
225 trains, which has changed the nasopharyngeal flora, opening the niche for entry of other virulent pat
226  groups and unaffected by knowledge of local flora or value placed on wildflower viewing.
227 onding to 3.9% of the extant global vascular flora, or approximately the size of the native European
228 n-utero infection, acquisition from maternal flora, or postnatal acquisition from the hospital or com
229     Phylogenetic patterns in the naturalized flora partly result from phylogenetic patterns in the pl
230 ena that most clearly distinguish fauna from flora: perception, cognition, and motor activity.
231     In the complete absence of gut microbial flora PP is normal, but experimental PH is significantly
232  and host genotype data from the Flemish Gut Flora Project (n = 2,223) and two German cohorts (FoCus,
233  cohorts including American Gut, Flemish Gut Flora Project and the extended TwinsUK cohort.
234 et (n = 282) and the independent Flemish Gut Flora Project population cohort (n = 2,345).
235 0, 1920, and 1980, which are associated with flora projects and the establishment of inventory plots.
236 ast 25 years and including two large ongoing flora projects, were merged into a single list.
237  linked to rUTI and persistence in the fecal flora, providing compelling evidence of an intestinal re
238 ops with close relatives in the native plant flora received greater pesticide use, explaining roughly
239 biotic-induced alterations in the intestinal flora reduce ischemic brain injury in mice, an effect tr
240 ns by which the vast majority of the world's flora regenerate naturally, a framework for accurately p
241 preventing gram-positive cocci-related, skin flora-related, or central line-associated bacteremia in
242 utcome was gram-positive cocci-related, skin flora-related, or central line-associated bloodstream in
243 proach to prevent gram-positive-cocci-, skin-flora-related, or central-line-associated bacteremia in
244 rimary outcome was gram-positive cocci, skin-flora-related, or central-line-associated bloodstream in
245 urthermore, maintenance of the gut microbial flora relies on the expression of mosGCTLs in A. aegypti
246 zed metabolic systems present in the Earth's flora remain largely unstudied.
247 abnormal vaginal flora (ie, abnormal vaginal flora resolved in 361 [58%] of the 622 participants who
248 mpounds, and fermentability by the human gut flora, SCFAs production, nitric oxide and cytokine expre
249                                  Naturalized floras show a greater proportion of mycorrhizal plant sp
250 mblages between the two periods, with native flora significantly decreasing (-10.7%) and alien flora
251 anity has experienced a depletion of the gut flora since diverging from Pan.
252    However, its application to a continental flora, spanning large climate gradients, has been hamper
253 ee species and flowering dates of one ground flora species, which spans two centuries.
254 lture and clarified whether a cultured "oral flora" species represented a state of acute infection.
255 gue that the functional traits of each woody flora, specifically the N-fixing ability and architectur
256 e early colonizing species of the human oral flora (Streptococcus mutans, Streptococcus gordonii and
257   The second, found in bacteria from the gut flora such as Clostridioides difficile, salvages preQ(1)
258  trends for weedy plants reported from other floras, suggest that native and introduced weeds have di
259                          Mixed Gram-negative flora, suggesting fecal contamination was, however, in t
260 indings demonstrate in neonatal mice how gut flora synergizes with poly(I:C) to elicit protective int
261 arbor a highly diverse and dynamic microbial flora that can be explored for prevention of pathogen tr
262 ave resulted in the evolution of terrestrial flora that has shaped modern ecosystems and the diversif
263                                              Flora that surrounds the hives, and the apicultural prac
264      In the world's richest temperate alpine flora, that of the Tibet-Himalaya-Hengduan region, phylo
265                      In regional naturalized floras, the percentage of economic plants exceeds the gl
266 he normal human gastrointestinal and vaginal flora, they can also be occasional human pathogens.
267 nrolled for analyzing their indoor microbial flora through the use of electrostatic dust collectors (
268 uired additional signals provided by the gut flora through TLR5 and MyD88 signaling.
269 74%), which was predominantly normal vaginal flora throughout follow-up.
270 s derived from dietary tryptophan by the gut flora to activate AHR signaling in astrocytes and suppre
271 arcode sequences was generated for the local flora to determine the taxonomic composition of honey.
272  antibiotic-mediated depletion of intestinal flora to initiate colitis.
273  antibiotic-mediated depletion of intestinal flora to initiate colitis.
274 ing signals from the diet and the intestinal flora to modulate ongoing inflammation in the central ne
275 elial tight junctions, allowing resident gut flora to promote chronic increases in antimicrobial pept
276 ccompanied by a shift in the microbiological flora toward those species associated with health.
277                        The evolution of land flora transformed the terrestrial environment.
278 orial profile, which varies depending on the flora used by the honeybees.
279 on group, the prevalence of abnormal vaginal flora was 16.3% (95% CI 15.1-17.6) and that of urinary t
280                        Presence of bacterial flora was also associated with significantly increased P
281 actobacillus salivarius Such modification in flora was functionally linked to the antiinflammatory ef
282 nd post-diet intervention, and the microbial flora were analyzed using 16S variable region 4 rRNA gen
283 utum specimens and quantity of oropharyngeal flora were compared for different quantities of SECs and
284                 Normal skin or environmental flora were found on almost all positive cultures.
285                 Among differences in the gut flora were increased abundances of Lactobacillus and Bif
286                                      No oral flora were isolated in "no-talking" scenarios but were i
287 ange in the composition and diversity of gut flora when the pH of drinking water was altered.
288  strain V583 was actively killed by GI tract flora, whereas commensal enterococci flourished.
289  because of its modulating effect on the gut flora, which can influence the gut-liver axis.
290 r genera, remnant of the past palaeotropical flora, which inhabit temperate mountains.
291 ant immune response to indigenous intestinal flora, which might favor IBD development.
292 ert highly selective effects on resident gut flora, which, in turn, lead to very specific alterations
293 igh concentrations of common nontarget nasal flora with a turnaround time of under 4.5 h.
294 . (2016) The discovery of the Amazonian tree flora with an updated checklist of all known tree taxa.
295 N dataset is representative of the Brazilian flora with respect to the total number of species and ov
296 ition, diet had a preponderant impact on gut flora with some of the taxa being strongly associated wi
297 ty based on the composition of fossil diatom floras with organic carbon burial off Oregon in the Nort
298 of concept study demonstrates that bacterial flora within the neonatal feeding tubes may influence th
299 cutting on arthropod foliage communities and flora within Welsh upland permanent pastures (UK).
300  on encountering and photographing fauna and flora, yet the data collected in these efforts is rarely

 
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