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Abstract
Bifidobacteria are common gut commensals with purported health-promoting effects. This has encouraged scientific research into bifidobacteria, though recalcitrance to genetic manipulation and scarcity of molecular tools has hampered our knowledge on the precise molecular determinants of their health-promoting attributes and gut adaptation. To overcome this problem and facilitate functional genomic analyses in bifidobacteria, we created a large Tn5 transposon mutant library of the commensal Bifidobacterium breve UCC2003 that was further characterized by means of a
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1 School of Microbiology and APC Microbiome Institute, National University of Ireland, Cork, Ireland; Department of Nutrition, Bromatology and Food Technology, Complutense University, Madrid, Spain
2 School of Microbiology and APC Microbiome Institute, National University of Ireland, Cork, Ireland
3 Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Cambridge, UK