| Literature DB >> 31644955 |
Claudia M Trujillo-Vargas1, Laura Schaefer2, Jehan Alam3, Stephen C Pflugfelder4, Robert A Britton5, Cintia S de Paiva6.
Abstract
The bacterial communities that collectively inhabit our body are called the microbiome. Virtually all body surface harbors bacteria. Recent advances in next-generation sequencing that have provided insight into the diversity, composition of bacterial communities, and their interaction are discussed in this review, as well as the current knowledge of how the microbiome promotes ocular health. The ocular surface is a site of low bacterial load. Sjögren Syndrome is an autoimmune disease that affects the exocrine glands, causing dry mouth and dry eye. Systemic antibiotic treatment and germ-free mice have demonstrated that commensal bacteria have a protective role for the ocular surface and lacrimal gland. The existence of a gut-eye-lacrimal gland axis-microbiome is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Dysbiosis; Microbiome; Sjögren syndrome; dry eye; dry mouth
Year: 2019 PMID: 31644955 PMCID: PMC7124975 DOI: 10.1016/j.jtos.2019.10.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ocul Surf ISSN: 1542-0124 Impact factor: 5.033