Tesis doctoralsDepartament de Medicina i Cirurgia

Metabolism of gut microbiota regulates epigenetic events in host tissues

  • Datos identificativos

    Identificador:  TDX:4689
    Autores:  Miró Blanch, Joan
    Resumen:
    How the gut microbiota and its host communicate and react together to environmental stimuli helps us understand the mammalian holobiont. Both produce metabolites that can regulate and limit epigenetic marks in the host. Using a germ-free mouse model, including males and females, we investigated how biological sex and microbiota status influenced this communication. We have focused on the liver as target tissue. Our results show the interaction of sex and microbiota in controlling the levels of DNA methylation in an additive manner. Where males are hypomethylated compared to females, and presence of microbiota accentuates this pattern. Males without microbiota present a feminised pattern of gene expression. We have observed a link between the levels of host DNA methylation, and the Ruminococcaceae family, and we propose them as a key ecological player in the holobiont. Influencing host gene regulation in a sex-dependent manner, through the modulation of host DNA methylation levels.
  • Otros:

    Editor: Universitat Rovira i Virgili
    Fecha: 2023-07-24, 2025-07-23T22:05:20Z, 2023-10-04T08:38:09Z
    Identificador: http://hdl.handle.net/10803/689069
    Departamento/Instituto: Departament de Medicina i Cirurgia, Universitat Rovira i Virgili.
    Idioma: eng
    Autor: Miró Blanch, Joan
    Director: Yanes Torrado, Óscar
    Fuente: TDX (Tesis Doctorals en Xarxa)
    Formato: application/pdf, 236 p.
  • Palabras clave:

    Epigenetics
    Microbiome
    Metabolism
    Metabolismo
    Epigenética
    Microbioma
    Metabolisme
    Ciències de la salut
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