| Literature DB >> 32231664 |
Salwan Al-Nasiry1, Elena Ambrosino2, Melissa Schlaepfer3, Servaas A Morré2,4, Lotte Wieten5, Jan Willem Voncken6, Marialuigia Spinelli3, Martin Mueller3,7, Boris W Kramer7.
Abstract
In the last decade, the microbiota, i.e., combined populations of microorganisms living inside and on the surface of the human body, has increasingly attracted attention of researchers in the medical field. Indeed, since the completion of the Human Microbiome Project, insight and interest in the role of microbiota in health and disease, also through study of its combined genomes, the microbiome, has been steadily expanding. One less explored field of microbiome research has been the female reproductive tract. Research mainly from the past decade suggests that microbial communities residing in the reproductive tract represent a large proportion of the female microbial network and appear to be involved in reproductive failure and pregnancy complications. Microbiome research is facing technological and methodological challenges, as detection techniques and analysis methods are far from being standardized. A further hurdle is understanding the complex host-microbiota interaction and the confounding effect of a multitude of constitutional and environmental factors. A key regulator of this interaction is the maternal immune system that, during the peri-conceptional stage and even more so during pregnancy, undergoes considerable modulation. This review aims to summarize the current literature on reproductive tract microbiota describing the composition of microbiota in different anatomical locations (vagina, cervix, endometrium, and placenta). We also discuss putative mechanisms of interaction between such microbial communities and various aspects of the immune system, with a focus on the characteristic immunological changes during normal pregnancy. Furthermore, we discuss how abnormal microbiota composition, "dysbiosis," is linked to a spectrum of clinical disorders related to the female reproductive system and how the maternal immune system is involved. Finally, based on the data presented in this review, the future perspectives in diagnostic approaches, research directions and therapeutic opportunities are explored.Entities:
Keywords: endometrial; female reproductive tract; immunology; microbiota; placental; pregnancy complications; preterm birth; vaginal
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32231664 PMCID: PMC7087453 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.00378
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
FIGURE 1The interaction between the endometrial microbiome and local immune mediators. (A) In healthy women, commensal bacterial communities interact with immune cells with at the feto-maternal interface through three potential mechanisms: (1) Commensal bacteria (green) maintain a healthy physical barrier by stimulating the production of different antimicrobial peptides (AMP) from endometrial cells and preserving epithelial tight junctions and stable mucus production. (2) Once encountered by immune cells in the endometrium, e.g., antigen presenting cells (APC), commensal bacteria trigger signal transduction via pattern recognition receptors (PRR) through their pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs). (3) Commensal bacteria can also produce metabolites, such as polysaccharides and short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), that potentially affect immune responses in endometrial epithelial cells and T-cells, or alter the endometrial fluid pH to produce a competitive niche microenvironment against pathogenic bacteria. These mechanisms result in activation of uterine NK (uNK) cells and the development of specific subsets of T-cells, characterized by high number of regulatory T-cells (Treg), low number of Th-17, and a switch from the Th1 to Th2 cytokine production (4). The interaction of activated uNK cells (KIR receptors) with HLA-C and -G from extravillous trophoblasts (EVT) from the implanting embryo will also promote EVT invasion, stromal matrix degradation, angiogenesis and ultimately the remodeling of maternal spiral arteries (5). These adaptive changes ensure an immunotolerant milieu for the semi-allogenic fetus and are essential steps essential step in normal placentation. (B) Disturbance of the normal endometrial microbiome can negatively impact the implantation process: (1) First, the dominance of non-commensal bacterial communities could weaken the integrity of the endometrial mucosal barrier by affecting the epithelial tight junctions and reducing AMP and mucin secretion. (2) This in turn will further weaken host defense mechanisms and allow pathogens to enter the endometrial stroma and elicit a profound immune reaction from APC and other immune cells harboring pattern recognition receptors (PRR). (3) Aberrant stimulation of T-cells, either directly from invading pathogens breaching the mucosal barrier or indirectly from absorbed bacterial products results in disbalance in cytokine production in favor of the pro-inflammatory Th-1 types, predominated by TNF-a, IFN, IL-2, and IL-10 (4). Aberration in uNK cell maturation, either primary or secondary to shallow EVT invasion, is a possible link between disturbed endometrial microbiome and incomplete remodeling of maternal spiral arteries, characteristic of the great obstetric syndromes (5).
FIGURE 2The conceptual relationship of reproductive tract microbiome and immune response. A multitude of environmental and constitutional factors affect the balance between tolerance to the fetus and commensal bacteria on one hand, and the immune response to pathogens and abnormal cells on the other hand. Loss of balance between the microbiome and immune responses would lead to either abnormal commensal microbiome and pathogenic infection “dysbiosis” or excessive immune reaction and sterile inflammation “dysregulated immunity.”
FIGURE 3The clinical implications of dysbiosis (abnormal microbiota) of the female reproductive tract in relation to pregnancy. Some disorders, e.g., endometriosis are indirectly related to pregnancy disorders through their negative impact on fertility. BV, bacterial vaginosis; PID, pelvic inflammatory disease; PPROM, premature prelabor rupture of membranes; RM, recurrent miscarriage; RIF, recurrent implantation failure; STI’s, sexually transmitted infections.
Steps to obtain reliable microbiota*.
| 1. Larger sample sizes |
| 2. Simultaneous use of different detection methods |
| 3. The elimination of extracellular DNA prior to molecular microbial profiling |
| 4. rigorous controls for reagents and equipment at all steps during sample processing and analysis |
| 5. The determination of the relative abundance of bacterial groups should be preceded by an absolute quantification of the bacterial load in samples and controls |
| 6. Prespecified and quantified bacterial mock communities to the examined samples will help to reveal biases and identify batch effects |
| 7. Demonstration of metabolically active and proliferating diverse bacteria within the placental or fetal tissue will be required to prove the existence of a viable, diverse and unique bacterial community that merits the term microbiota. |
| 8. Taking into consideration geographical, ethnic and societal habits of the population |