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R. gnavus is a strain of bacteria from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC). It is a Gram-positive, anaerobic, spore-forming bacterium. The strain can be used for microbiological research and analysis.

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2 protocols using r gnavus

1

Probiotics Modulate Gut Microbiome in Mice

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MMb, HMb, and GF mice received orally administered Paraprevotella clara, Bacteroides uniformis, SFB, Lactobacillus reuteri (BEI HM-102), Ruminococcus gnavus (ATCC 29149), MMb cx, HMb cx, Clostridium innocuum, or Clostridium immunis (100–150 μl; ~108–109 colony-forming units). P. clara, B. uniformis, C. innocuum, and C. immunis were isolated from the feces of HMb mice; SFB was previously obtained from Y. Umesaki (Yakult; Tokyo, Japan) and propagated in SFB-monocolonized mice at Harvard Medical School. Seven days later, the mice were challenged with DSS. In some experiments, fecal samples were collected before and 7 days after probiotic administration for microbiota analysis. For Reg3γ experiments, HMb mice received orally administered (150–200 μl; ~108–109 colony-forming units) Parabacteroides distasonis (ATCC 8503; control bacteria), R. gnavus (ATCC 29149), L. reuteri (BEI HM-102), Allobaculum stercoricanis (DSM 13633), Muribaculum intestinale (DSM 28989), or Lactobacillus vaginalis (DSM 5837). Mice were sacrificed 7 days later.
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2

Probiotics Modulate Gut Microbiome in Mice

Check if the same lab product or an alternative is used in the 5 most similar protocols
MMb, HMb, and GF mice received orally administered Paraprevotella clara, Bacteroides uniformis, SFB, Lactobacillus reuteri (BEI HM-102), Ruminococcus gnavus (ATCC 29149), MMb cx, HMb cx, Clostridium innocuum, or Clostridium immunis (100–150 μl; ~108–109 colony-forming units). P. clara, B. uniformis, C. innocuum, and C. immunis were isolated from the feces of HMb mice; SFB was previously obtained from Y. Umesaki (Yakult; Tokyo, Japan) and propagated in SFB-monocolonized mice at Harvard Medical School. Seven days later, the mice were challenged with DSS. In some experiments, fecal samples were collected before and 7 days after probiotic administration for microbiota analysis. For Reg3γ experiments, HMb mice received orally administered (150–200 μl; ~108–109 colony-forming units) Parabacteroides distasonis (ATCC 8503; control bacteria), R. gnavus (ATCC 29149), L. reuteri (BEI HM-102), Allobaculum stercoricanis (DSM 13633), Muribaculum intestinale (DSM 28989), or Lactobacillus vaginalis (DSM 5837). Mice were sacrificed 7 days later.
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