| Literature DB >> 34335634 |
Zhifeng Fang1,2, Lingzhi Li1,2, Hao Zhang1,2,3,4,5, Jianxin Zhao1,2,4, Wenwei Lu1,2,3, Wei Chen1,2,3.
Abstract
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a public health concern and is increasing in prevalence in urban areas. Recent advances in sequencing technology have demonstrated that the development of AD not only associate with the skin microbiome but gut microbiota. Gut microbiota plays an important role in allergic diseases including AD. The hypothesis of the "gut-skin" axis has been proposed and the cross-talk mechanism between them has been gradually demonstrated in the research. Probiotics contribute to the improvement of the intestinal environment, the balance of immune responses, regulation of metabolic activity. Most studies suggest that probiotic supplements may be an alternative for the prevention and treatment of AD. This study aimed to discuss the effects of probiotics on the clinical manifestation of AD based on gut microbial alterations. Here we reviewed the gut microbial alteration in patients with AD, the association between gut microbiota, epidermal barrier, and toll-like receptors, and the interaction of probiotics and gut microbiota. The potential mechanisms of probiotics on alleviating AD via upregulation of epidermal barrier and regulation of immune signaling had been discussed, and their possible effective substances on AD had been explored. This provides the supports for targeting gut microbiota to attenuate AD.Entities:
Keywords: atopic dermatitis; effective substances; gut microbiota; immune response; probiotics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34335634 PMCID: PMC8317022 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.720393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Changes in the gut microbiota of patients with atopic dermatitis.
| Type of Study | Nation/Year | Changes in Gut microbiota | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Children, incident AD (n=62) | Estonian, Swedish; 1999 | The fewer lactobacilli in the gut of allergic children, higher aerobic bacteria, coliforms, and | ( |
| Infants at high risk of atopic diseases (n=76) | Finland; 2001 | Atopic subjects had more | ( |
| Infants, incident AD (n=44) | Estonian, Swedish; 2001 | Compared to healthy infants, fewer enterococci and bifidobacteria in the gut of allergic babies. Allergic infants had higher clostridia, | ( |
| Minor patients with AD (n=30), healthy control subjects (n=68, sex-matched) | Japan; 2003 | The proportion of | ( |
| Infants with atopic symptoms (n=957) | Netherlands; 2007 | The presence of | ( |
| Infants with eczema (n=37) and controls (n=24) | United Kingdom, New Zealand; 2008 |
| ( |
| Healthy infants (n=20), infants with atopic eczema (n=15) | Swedish; 2008 | Alpha diversity indicators were significantly less in infants with atopic eczema than that in healthy infants | ( |
| Patients, incident allergic symptoms (n=47) | Swedish; 2009 | The relative abundances of | ( |
| Infants with eczema, (n=20), healthy control subjects (n=20) | Switzerland; 2012 | Infants with eczema had lower diversity and a lower diversity of | ( |
| Infants at high risk of allergic disease (n=98) | Australia; 2012 | Gut microbial diversity was lower in infants with eczema compared to infants without eczema | ( |
| Patients with AD (n=90), healthy control subjects (n=42) | Korea; 2016 | The proportion of | ( |
| Healthy infants (n=66), infants with AD (n=63) | Korea; 2018 | Bacterial cell amounts were lower and the relative abundances of | ( |
| Patients with AD (n=23), controls (n=58) | Brazil; 2020 |
| ( |
| Patients with AD (n=44), healthy control subjects (n=49) | China; 2021 | Alpha diversity decreased in patients with AD than healthy subjects. | ( |
| Patients with AD (n=19), other allergic diseases patients (n=20) | China; 2021 | The relative abundances of | ( |
Figure 1The association of toll-like receptor signaling and immune responses in the intestine and skin. TLR ligands from bacteria, viruses, and pathogens were recognized and activated TLR signaling pathways, which bridged the innate and adaptive immunity in the intestine and skin. TLR, toll-like receptors; MyD88, myeloid differentiation factor 88; P, phosphorylation.
Effects of probiotics on the clinical manifestations of AD in the different crowd.
| Probiotics | Participants | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Pregnant women; N=130 | Probiotics significantly reduced the risk of developing eczema and AD | ( |
|
| Pregnant women; N=415 | Probiotic consumption significantly decreased the proportion of Th22 cells and prevented AD in their offspring | ( |
|
| Pregnant women with a family history of allergy; N=105 |
| ( |
|
| Pregnant women; N=415 | Probiotics reduced the cumulative incidence of AD but did not affect atopic sensitization | ( |
|
| Preterm infants; N=1099 | Probiotics did not affect the incidence of allergic diseases and atopic sensitization | ( |
|
| Infants N=474 |
| ( |
|
| Infants aged <7 months with atopic dermatitis; N=90 | No effect on AD markers | ( |
|
| Children aged 4-48 months with AD; N=66 |
| ( |
|
| Children aged 1-3 years with moderate-to-severe AD; N=90 | The clinical improvement was associated with the administration of the probiotic mixture | ( |
|
| Children aged 12 months to 13 years; N=118 |
| ( |
|
| children aged 1-18 years with moderate-to-severe AD | Probiotics significantly improved the clinical symptoms of AD | ( |
|
| Children aged 2-13 years; N=82 | Probiotic significantly reduced the SCORAD scores, but the improvement of clinical symptoms had no difference in probiotic and placebo groups | ( |
|
| Children aged 4 to 17 years with moderate AD; N=50 | The SCORAD index and the use of topical steroids were significantly reduced in the probiotic group compared with the control group | ( |
|
| Adult patients N=44 |
| ( |
| Heat-killed | Adult patients N=34 |
| ( |
Figure 2The diagram of the potential effective substances for suppressing Th2-type immune responses. CLA, conjugated linoleic acid; SCFA, short-chain fatty acid; Treg, regulatory T cells.