Editorial
Gut microbiome beats two to zero host genome
Abstract
The gut microbiota and its genomic scaffold, exceeding the human one nearly 500 times, substantially affect human health and diseases. Host-microbe interactions, exerted through microbial biochemical and immunological activities, contain pathogen burden, control neurological and endocrine signalling, enterocyte wellness, energy biosynthesis, gut dysbiosis, complement gaps of host metabolic pathways, finally contributing to human physiology and disease within the gastrointestinal district and through gut-liver and gut-brain axis (1).