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Gut Science is an international, open-access journal dedicated to the fundamental basic science of gastroenterology and hepatology Closely associated with Gut, it upholds the highest scientific standards, publishing cutting-edge research and reviews on molecular mechanisms, physiology, and pathophysiology By fostering foundational experimental research, Gut Science aims to drive
- Authors | Gut
Gut delivers up-to-date, authoritative, clinically oriented coverage in all areas of gastroenterology and hepatology Regular features include articles describing novel mechanisms of disease and new management strategies, both diagnostic and therapeutic, likely to impact on clinical practice within the foreseeable future by leading authorities
- About | Gut
Gut is a leading international journal in gastroenterology and hepatology and has an established reputation for publishing first class clinical research of the alimentary tract, the liver, biliary tree and pancreas Gut delivers up-to-date, authoritative, clinically oriented coverage in all areas of gastroenterology and hepatology Regular features include articles describing novel mechanisms
- Editorial Board - Gut
Comprehensive list of the editorial board for Gut, including editor in chief, associate editors social media advisors
- Current Issue - Gut
Gut microbiota Original research: Gut microbial modulation of 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid and dopaminergic signalling influences attention in obesity (27 September, 2025)
- Gut microbiome and health: mechanistic insights | Gut
The gut microbiota is now considered as one of the key elements contributing to the regulation of host health Virtually all our body sites are colonised by microbes suggesting different types of crosstalk with our organs Because of the development of molecular tools and techniques (ie, metagenomic, metabolomic, lipidomic, metatranscriptomic), the complex interactions occurring between the
- Post-infection disorders of the gut: of latitude and longitude
The study by Marasco et al , in Gut , was ambitious in its aim to employ an epidemiology survey to establish post-infection disorders of gut-brain interaction (PI-DGBI) as an entity distinct from other DGBIs 1 This, after all, was not a mechanistic study However, if we take this study in conjunction with its mothership the Rome Foundation Global Epidemiology Study (RFGES) and her spawn, the
- Genetic dissection of stool frequency implicates vitamin B1 metabolism . . .
Background Genetic studies of stool frequency (SF), an indirect proxy for gastrointestinal transit, may reveal therapeutically tractable pathways relevant to IBS and other dysmotility disorders Objective To identify genes and mechanisms involved in gut motility, providing a foundation for clinical translation Design We performed a multiancestry genome-wide association study (GWAS) meta
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