“…As described previously, the avian gut microbiota along with their genes and gene products (the microbiome), perform several functions that heavily impact host physiology. Not only does the gut microbiome play a critical role in modulating host immune defense ( Kogut et al, 2017 ; Broom and Kogut, 2018 ), brain function ( Villageliu and Lyte, 2018 ; Lyte et al, 2021 ), host metabolism regulation ( Stanley et al, 2014 ; Lyte et al, 2021 ; Zhang et al, 2021 ), but also other physiological processes and characteristics thought to depend solely on the genetic program of the bird; gut-liver axis ( Bao et al, 2021 ), gut-bone axis ( Wideman et al., 2012 ; Tomaszewska et al, 2015 ; Airubaye et al, 2020 ), and gut-muscle axis ( Zhang et al, 2021 ). A greater understanding of the key signaling pathways of the cross-species homeostatic regulation between the gut microbiota and its host implicated in these axes are a prerequisite for optimizing therapeutic dietary strategies to manipulate the gut microbiota.…”