Metabolome and microbiome profiling of a stress-sensitive rat model of gut-brain axis dysfunction
Shalome A. Bassett(AgResearch), Nicole C. Roy(AgResearch), Leigh Ryan(AgResearch), Catherine Stanton(Teagasc - The Irish Agriculture and Food Development Authority), Niall P. Hyland(University College Cork), Karl Fraser(AgResearch), John F. Cryan(University College Cork), Timothy G. Dinan(University College Cork), Julie E. Dalziel(AgResearch), Patrick Fitzgerald(University College Cork), Gerard Clarke(University College Cork), Jim Webster(AgResearch), Wayne Young(AgResearch)
Cited by 37
Related Papers
The Microbiota-Gut-Brain Axis
|Physiological Reviews|2019|4.8k
Serotonin, tryptophan metabolism and the brain-gut-microbiome axis
|Behavioural Brain Research|2014|2k
The microbiome-gut-brain axis during early life regulates the hippocampal serotonergic system in a sex-dependent manner
|Molecular Psychiatry|2012|1.9k
Rumen microbial community composition varies with diet and host, but a core microbiome is found across a wide geographical range
|Scientific Reports|2015|1.7k
Transferring the blues: Depression-associated gut microbiota induces neurobehavioural changes in the rat
|Journal of Psychiatric Research|2016|1.7k