Annotation details (ID: 5160)

Experiment ID: 651

Field Description
namecharacterizing dysbiosis of gut microbiome in pd: evidence for overabundance of opportunistic pathogens
doihttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41531-020-0112-6
sraprjna601994
mapmd555dd5914f95e6b268f7d9fac9e5cbeef
datamd5c4675dfb2f805e1e0da857180fd1e55b

Annotations Details

Exp. ID User ID Description Date Region Sequences Status Flag
651amnoncommon parkinson's disease, state of alabama, united states of america, adult, feces, homo sapiens2020-09-13v449approvedNo
Field Description
description
typecommon
num_sequences49
regionv4
flags0
agentcalour
methodprevalence > 0.5
date2020-09-13
usernameamnon
privaten
allparkinson's disease
allstate of alabama
allunited states of america
alladult
allfeces
allhomo sapiens

Annotation not flagged as potentially problematic

Review status


Accepted (annotation has been reviewed by the dbBact team and accepted)

Sequences

Ontology terms (including parents)

all: state of alabama excreta cellular organisms synucleinopathy south region hominidae geographic location disease of anatomical entity continuant organism part deuterostomia east south central division disease by anatomical system disease euteleostomi dipnotetrapodomorpha amniota boreoeutheria entity central nervous system disease homo united states of america na north america material property developmental stage continent eutheria taxonomy root hominoidea tetrapoda mammalia material anatomical entity contiguous united states of america feces nervous system disease teleostomi organism substance chordata adult catarrhini bilateria homo sapiens material entity craniata <chordata> parkinson's disease opisthokonta experimental factor vertebrata <metazoa> part of plant or animal euarchontoglires simiiformes nonmeat part of animal eumetazoa anatomy basic component region (contiguous united states of america) homininae disposition part of animal haplorrhini sarcopterygii animal body or body part anatomical structure anatomical entity organism metazoa primates independent continuant process neurodegenerative disease theria <mammalia> gnathostomata <vertebrate> eukaryota

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