| Literature DB >> 25883569 |
Andrea G Braundmeier1, Katherine M Lenz1, Kristin S Inman2, Nicholas Chia3, Patricio Jeraldo4, Marina R S Walther-António5, Margret E Berg Miller6, Fang Yang7, Douglas J Creedon8, Heidi Nelson5, Bryan A White6.
Abstract
Humans have evolved along with the millions of microorganisms that populate their bodies. These microbes (10(14)) outnumber human cells by 10 to 1 and account for 3 × 10(6) genes, more than ten times the 25,000 human genes. This microbial metagenome acts as our "other genome" and like our own genes, is unique to the individual. Recent international efforts such as the Human Microbiome Project (HMP) and the MetaHIT Project have helped catalog these microbial genomes using culture-independent, high-throughput, next-generation sequencing. This manuscript will describe recent efforts to define microbial diversity in the female reproductive tract because of the impact that microbial function has on reproductive efficiency. In this review, we will discuss current evidence that microbial communities are critical for maintaining reproductive health and how perturbations of microbial community structures can impact reproductive health from the aspect of infection, reproductive cyclicity, pregnancy, and disease states. Investigations of the human microbiome are propelling interventional strategies from treating medical populations to treating individual patients. In particular, we highlight how understanding and defining microbial community structures in different disease and physiological states have lead to the discovery of biomarkers and, more importantly, the development and implementation of microbial intervention strategies (probiotics) into modern day medicine. Finally this review will conclude with a literature summary of the effectiveness of microbial intervention strategies that have been implemented in animal and human models of disease and the potential for integrating these microbial intervention strategies into standard clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Pregnancy; biomarkers; individualized medicine; microbiome; reproductive tract infections
Year: 2015 PMID: 25883569 PMCID: PMC4381647 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2015.00097
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Summary of literature on microbial dynamics and reproductive physiology.
| Menstruation | Altered vaginal microbiome stability, but no change in microbial function | Gajer et al., |
| Placental function | Modulation of placental function and metabolism | Aagaard et al., |
| Preterm birth (PTB) | Altered microbial diversity, but not richness; | Brocklehurst et al., |
| Pregnancy | Reduction in microbial richness and diversity; | Dechen et al., |
| Vaginal parturition | Colonization of fetal microbiome | Dominguez et al., |
| Bacterial vaginosis (BV) | Altered vaginal bacterial colonization; | Roger et al., |
| Pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) | Ascension of pathogens from the lower to upper reproductive tract; Pathogens connected to PID also associated with BV | van Oostrum et al., |
| STDs/STIs | Associated with BV; | Roger et al., |
| Cancers of the reproductive tract | Shift from protective to harmful bacteria; | Nicol et al., |
| Ovarian stimulation for IVF | Altered vaginal microbiome, but no change in diversity of microbial species | Hyman et al., |
| Estrogen circulation | Estrabolome metabolizing functions | Cole et al., |