| Literature DB >> 34084131 |
Brynn A Hollingsworth1, David R Cassatt1, Andrea L DiCarlo1, Carmen I Rios1, Merriline M Satyamitra1, Thomas A Winters1, Lanyn P Taliaferro1.
Abstract
Study of the human microbiota has been a centuries-long endeavor, but since the inception of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Human Microbiome Project in 2007, research has greatly expanded, including the space involving radiation injury. As acute radiation syndrome (ARS) is multisystemic, the microbiome niches across all areas of the body may be affected. This review highlights advances in radiation research examining the effect of irradiation on the microbiome and its potential use as a target for medical countermeasures or biodosimetry approaches, or as a medical countermeasure itself. The authors also address animal model considerations for designing studies, and the potential to use the microbiome as a biomarker to assess radiation exposure and predict outcome. Recent research has shown that the microbiome holds enormous potential for mitigation of radiation injury, in the context of both radiotherapy and radiological/nuclear public health emergencies. Gaps still exist, but the field is moving forward with much promise.Entities:
Keywords: acute radiation syndrome; microbiome; radiation; radiation biodosimetry; radiation medical countermeasure
Year: 2021 PMID: 34084131 PMCID: PMC8167050 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2021.643283
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1Overview of the body areas inhabited by microbiota, their roles in those organs, and the factors contributing to their diversity among individuals and across time. Reprinted from Human Microbes—The Power Within, by V.D. Appanna, 2018. Springer Singapore (Appanna, 2018).
Dominant bacteria in microbial communities across the human body.
| Body area | Bacteria | Characterization |
|---|---|---|
| GI ( | Firmicutes phylum | Together with bacteroidetes makes up 80% of the gut flora |
| Bacteroidetes phylum | Together with Firmicutes makes up 80% of the gut flora | |
| Actinobacteria phylum | Makes up ∼3% of the gut flora | |
| Proteobacteria phylum | Makes up ∼1% of the gut flora | |
| Oral Cavity ( |
| Predominant genus across the oral cavity, in the phylum Firmicutes |
|
| Predominant genus on the tongue and teeth, in the phylum Actinobacteria | |
|
| Predominant genus on the lips, palate, and cheek, in the phylum Proteobacteria | |
|
| Predominant genus on the tongue, in the phylum Proteobacteria | |
|
| Predominant genus on the teeth, in the phylum Firmicutes | |
| Skin ( |
| Most abundant skin inhabitant making up 90% of the resident aerobic flora |
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| Accounts for 20–80% of the micrococci isolated from the throughout the normal skin | |
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| Common location: nose, perineum, and vulvar skin. Presence varies with age. More abundant with dermatologic disease | |
| Lung ( |
| Makes up 7–23% of microbes from healthy subjects’ bronchoalveolar lavage, genus in the Bacteroidetes phylum |
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| Makes up 6–15% of microbes from healthy subjects’ bronchoalveolar lavage, genus in the phylum Firmicutes | |
| Naso-pharyngeal ( |
| Makes up ∼42% of microbes from healthy subject nasal swabs, member of Actinobacteria phylum |
|
| Makes up ∼10% of microbes from healthy subject nasal swabs, member of Firmicutes phylum | |
|
| Makes up ∼8% of microbes from healthy subject nasal swabs, member of Actinobacteria phylum | |
| Vaginal ( |
| Makes up 1–88% of healthy vaginal microbiota, with 34% of healthy females’ vaginal microbiota dominated by this species |
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| Makes up 0–83% of healthy vaginal microbiota, with 27% of healthy females’ vaginal microbiota dominated by this species | |
|
| Makes up 0.4–86% of healthy vaginal microbiota, with 6% of healthy females’ vaginal microbiota dominated by this species | |
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| Makes up 0.5–80% of healthy vaginal microbiota, with 5% of healthy females’ vaginal microbiota dominated by this species |
FIGURE 2Methodology for curation of literature for this review (*NCT: clinicaltrials.gov).
Targeted treatments that modulate the microbiome and radiation response.
| Antibiotics | Doxycycline ( |
| Neomycin ( | |
| Enrofloxacin ( | |
| Tetracycline ( | |
| Ciprofloxacin ( | |
| Probiotics |
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| Diet | Prebiotics: non-digestible dietary fibers (e.g., apple pectin) ( |
| Hydrogen-water ( | |
| Omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids ( | |
| Vanillin ( | |
| Vitamins D, E, and C ( | |
| Flavonoids ( | |
| Polyphenols ( | |
| Folic acid ( | |
| Fecal Microbiota Transplant | Short-chained fatty acids ( |
| Indole 3-propionic acid ( | |
| Others | 4-Nitro-phenyl-piperazine pharmacophore ( |
| Phycocyanin ( |