Human milk variation is shaped by maternal genetics and impacts the infant gut microbiome
Kelsey E. Johnson(University of Southern California), Ran Blekhman(University of Chicago), Michael C. Rudolph(University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus), Annalee Fürst(University of California San Diego), Eric F. Lock(University of Minnesota), Nikhila Yerabandi(University of California San Diego), Mattea Allert(University of Minnesota), Ellen W. Demerath(University of Minnesota), Lars Bode(University of California, San Diego), Frank W. Albert(University of California, Los Angeles), Dan Knights(University of Colorado Boulder), Timothy Heisel(University of Minnesota Medical Center), David A. Fields(University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center), Cheryl A. Gale(University of Minnesota Medical Center), Katherine M. Jacobs(University of Minnesota Medical Center)
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