Comstock Laurie E
Channing Laboratory, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 181 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Cell Host Microbe. 2009 Jun 18;5(6):522-6. doi: 10.1016/j.chom.2009.05.010.
Much of the mutualistic relationship between humans and their resident intestinal Bacteroides species is founded on glycans. The host provides plant polysaccharides and host-derived glycans and, in return, receives beneficial end products of bacterial fermentation. Glycans from the bacteria themselves are required for the establishment and survival of these organisms in the colonic ecosystem and provide immunomodulatory properties to the host. Coordinated synthesis and catabolism of bacterial glycans is likely to contribute to the host-bacterial mutualism.
人类与其肠道内常驻拟杆菌物种之间的共生关系很大程度上基于聚糖。宿主提供植物多糖和宿主来源的聚糖,作为回报,宿主会获得细菌发酵产生的有益终产物。细菌自身的聚糖对于这些生物体在结肠生态系统中的建立和生存是必需的,并且能为宿主提供免疫调节特性。细菌聚糖的协同合成与分解代谢可能有助于宿主与细菌的共生关系。