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UID:20260530T075158EDT-1091waVhNU@132.216.98.100
DTSTAMP:20260530T115158Z
DESCRIPTION:We are at the forefront of understanding complex relationships 
 between bacteria and multiple parameters of health of the developing infan
 t. Bacterial colonization of the infant intestinal tract and other barrier
  organs begins during the process of birth\, and microbes and microbial me
 tabolites interact with humans during fetal life. Humans have evolved over
  millennia to require interaction with microbes for competent immune devel
 opment and metabolism\, and novel functions are now being uncovered. Moreo
 ver\, the establishment of the microbiome in the critical neonatal period 
 is foundational for lifelong health and disease susceptibility.\n\nDr. Jul
 iette Madan\, pediatrician\, neonatologist\, physician-scientist and Clini
 cal Director of the Children’s Environmental Health and Disease Prevention
  Research Center at Dartmouth directs large-scale molecular epidemiology c
 ohort investigations of human microbiome studies beginning in fetal life\,
  in high risk populations (e.g. prematurity and cystic fibrosis) and in he
 alth. Her research program aims to rigorously test associations between mi
 crobiome and metabolome development and human health\, and to apply this k
 nowledge to the discovery of strategies for optimal health promotion in hi
 gh risk populations.\n
DTSTART:20191011T150000Z
DTEND:20191011T160000Z
LOCATION:Room 1034\, McIntyre Medical Building\, CA\, QC\, Montreal\, H3G 1
 Y6\, 3655 promenade Sir William Osler
SUMMARY:Seminar: A second life: microbe–human interactions beginning in inf
 ancy
URL:https://www.mcgill.ca/physiology/channels/event/seminar-second-life-mic
 robe-human-interactions-beginning-infancy-300030
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