Viehof, Alina


Publications
4

HiBC: a publicly available collection of bacterial strains isolated from the human gut

Citation
Hitch et al. (2025). Nature Communications 16 (1)
Names
32 Names
Abstract
Abstract Numerous bacteria in the human gut microbiome remain unknown and/or have yet to be cultured. While collections of human gut bacteria have been published, few strains are accessible to the scientific community. We have therefore created a publicly available collection of bacterial strains isolated from the human gut. The Human intestinal Bacteria Collection (HiBC) (https://www.hibc.rwth-aachen.de) contains 340 strains representing 198 species within 29 families and 7 phyla, of
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Broad diversity of human gut bacteria accessible via a traceable strain deposition system

Citation
Hitch et al. (2024).
Names
Abstract
Numerous bacteria in the human gut microbiome remain unknown and/or have yet to be cultured. While collections of human gut bacteria have been published, few strains have been made publicly available. A major hurdle in making strains publicly available is their deposition to public culture collections. We propose a framework for the bulk-deposition of strains to culture collections, which removes many of the barriers previously identified (www.dsmz.de/bulk-deposit). Using this bulk-deposition sy
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Anaerobic single‐cell dispensing facilitates the cultivation of human gut bacteria

Citation
Afrizal et al. (2022). Environmental Microbiology 24 (9)
Names
20 Names
Abstract
Summary Cultivation via classical agar plate (CAP) approaches is widely used to study microbial communities, but they are time‐consuming. An alternative approach is the application of single‐cell dispensing (SCD), which allows high‐throughput, label‐free sorting of microscopic particles. We aimed to develop a new anaerobic SCD workflow to cultivate human gut bacteria and compared it with CAP using faecal communities on three rich culture media. We found that the SCD approach si
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