| Literature DB >> 34118463 |
Zhuye Jie1, Chen Chen2, Lilan Hao3, Fei Li3, Liju Song3, Xiaowei Zhang3, Jie Zhu3, Liu Tian3, Xin Tong3, Kaiye Cai4, Zhe Zhang3, Yanmei Ju5, Xinlei Yu3, Ying Li3, Hongcheng Zhou6, Haorong Lu6, Xuemei Qiu3, Qiang Li3, Yunli Liao3, Dongsheng Zhou3, Heng Lian3, Yong Zuo3, Xiaomin Chen3, Weiqiao Rao3, Yan Ren3, Yuan Wang3, Jin Zi3, Rong Wang3, Na Liu3, Jinghua Wu3, Wei Zhang3, Xiao Liu3, Yang Zong3, Weibin Liu3, Liang Xiao7, Yong Hou3, Xun Xu3, Huanming Yang8, Jian Wang8, Karsten Kristiansen9, Huijue Jia10.
Abstract
The vagina contains at least a billion microbial cells, dominated by lactobacilli. Here we perform metagenomic shotgun sequencing on cervical and fecal samples from a cohort of 516 Chinese women of reproductive age, and cervical, fecal, and salivary samples from a second cohort of 632 women. Factors such as pregnancy, delivery histories, cesarean section, and breast-feeding were all more important than menstrual cycle in shaping the microbiome, and such information would be necessary before trying to interpret differences between vagino-cervical microbiome data. Greater proportion of Bifidobacterium breve was seen with older age at sexual debut. The relative abundance of lactobacilli especially Lactobacillus crispatus was negatively associated with pregnancy history. Potential markers for lack of menstrual regularity, heavy flow, dysmenorrhea, and contraceptives were also identified. Lactobacilli were rare during breast-feeding or post-menopause. Other features such as mood fluctuations and facial speckles could potentially be predicted from the vagino-cervical microbiome. Gut and salivary microbiome, plasma vitamins, metals, amino acids, and hormones showed associations with the vagino-cervical microbiome. Our results offer an unprecedented glimpse into the microbiota of the female reproductive tract and call for international collaborations to better understand its long-term health impact other than in the settings of infection or pre-term birth.Entities:
Keywords: Breast-feeding; Delivery histories; Metagenomic shotgun sequencing; Pregnancy history; Vagino-cervical microbiome
Year: 2021 PMID: 34118463 DOI: 10.1016/j.gpb.2021.01.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genomics Proteomics Bioinformatics ISSN: 1672-0229 Impact factor: 7.691