Nature Communications (Jan 2022)

Reduced infant rhesus macaque growth rates due to environmental enteric dysfunction and association with histopathology in the large intestine

  • Sara M. Hendrickson,
  • Archana Thomas,
  • Kamm Prongay,
  • Andrew J. Haertel,
  • Laura M. Garzel,
  • Leanne Gill,
  • Tasha Barr,
  • Nicholas S. Rhoades,
  • Rachel Reader,
  • Mark Galan,
  • Julie M. Carroll,
  • Charles T. Roberts,
  • Lina Gao,
  • Ian J. Amanna,
  • Ilhem Messaoudi,
  • Mark K. Slifka

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-27925-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Environmental enteric dysfunction (EED), a subclinical disorder of intestinal function, is associated with malnutrition, infant growth stunting and pathologies in the small intestine. Here the authors report that infant rhesus macaques that are naturally exposed to enteric pathogens commonly linked to human growth stunting present with EED and growth faltering that associates with large intestine pathologies.