Temperate gut phages are prevalent, diverse, and predominantly inactive
Sofia Dahlman(Monash University), Jeremy J. Barr(San Diego State University), Remy B. Young(Hudson Institute of Medical Research), Robert A. Edwards(Argonne National Laboratory), Juris A. Grasis(University of California, Merced), Jodee A. Gould(Hudson Institute of Medical Research), Emily L. Rutten(Hudson Institute of Medical Research), Dinesh Subedi(Monash University), Christopher Turkington(University College Cork), Dena Lyras(Discovery Institute), Emily L. Gulliver(Hudson Institute of Medical Research), Ciaren Kett(Monash University), Samuel C. Forster(Hudson Institute of Medical Research), Neda Nezam-Abadi(University College Cork), Laura Avellaneda-Franco(Monash University)
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