| Literature DB >> 34881196 |
Nengneng Zheng1, Renyong Guo2, Jinxi Wang1, Wei Zhou1, Zongxin Ling3,4.
Abstract
Lactobacillus iners, first described in 1999, is a prevalent bacterial species of the vaginal microbiome. As L. iners does not easily grow on de Man-Rogosa-Sharpe agar, but can grow anaerobically on blood agar, it has been initially overlooked by traditional culture methods. It was not until the wide application of molecular biology techniques that the function of L. iners in the vaginal microbiome was carefully explored. L. iners has the smallest genome among known Lactobacilli and it has many probiotic characteristics, but is partly different from other major vaginal Lactobacillus species, such as L. crispatus, in contributing to the maintenance of a healthy vaginal microbiome. It is not only commonly present in the healthy vagina but quite often recovered in high numbers in bacterial vaginosis (BV). Increasing evidence suggests that L. iners is a transitional species that colonizes after the vaginal environment is disturbed and offers overall less protection against vaginal dysbiosis and, subsequently, leads to BV, sexually transmitted infections, and adverse pregnancy outcomes. Accordingly, under certain conditions, L. iners is a genuine vaginal symbiont, but it also seems to be an opportunistic pathogen. Further studies are necessary to identify the exact role of this intriguing species in vaginal health and diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Lactobacillus iners; bacterial vaginosis; dysbiosis; sexually transmitted infections; vaginal microbiota
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34881196 PMCID: PMC8645935 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.792787
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Main results per study on L. iners and PTB.
| Author (year) | Country | Time of sample collection | Sample size | Tools implied for identification | Main findings | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Petricevic et al. | Austria | At 11-14 weeks of gestation | 111 women (white European, Middle Eastern, Asian) | PCR-DGGE and sequencing |
| ( | |
| Kindinger et al. | United Kingdom | At 16 weeks of gestation | 161 women (30 Black, 104 Caucasian, 27 Asian) | 16S rRNA gene sequencing at V1-V3 region |
| ( | |
| Callahan et al. | United States | Weekly | Low-risk cohort: 39 women; | 16S rRNA gene sequencing at V4 region |
| ( | |
| Tabatabaei et al. | Canada | At 8-13 weeks of gestation | 94 spontaneous PTB cases, 356 term controls | 16S rRNA gene sequencing at V4 region |
| ( | |
| Elovitz et al. | United States | At 16–20 weeks, 20–24 weeks and 24–28 weeks of gestation | 539 women (402 African American, 115 white, 22 other) | 16S rRNA gene sequencing at V3-V4 region | In non-African American women, | ( | |
| Fettweis et al. | United States | At prenatal visit, at triage | 45 spontaneous PTB cases and 90 term controls (African American predominantly) | 16S rRNA gene sequencing at V1-V3 region |
| ( | |
| Aslam et al. | Pakistan | Not available | 8 term vaginal swabs, 8 preterm vaginal swabs, and 8 preterm placenta tissues | 16S rRNA gene sequencing at V1-V2 region | Metagenomics data of vaginal swabs and placental tissues from severe PTB indicated that | ( | |
| Blostein et al. | Peru | Before 16 weeks of gestation (9 weeks on average) | 25 PTB cases and 100 term controls | 16S rRNA gene sequencing at V4 region | Overall, no CST (diverse, | ( | |
| Sarmento et al. | Brazil | In the second trimester | 146 women | 16S rRNA gene sequencing at V1-V3 region |
| ( | |
| Kumar et al. | India | In each trimester of pregnancy | 18 PTB cases and 20 term controls | 16S rRNA gene sequencing at V3-V4 region | A significantly higher abundance of | ( | |
| Witkin et al. | Brazil | In the second trimester | 613 women | 16S rRNA gene sequencing at V1-V3 region | Spontaneous PTB occurred in 9.6%, 9.3%, and 6.9% of women when | ( | |
| Goodfellow et al. | United Kingdom | At 15-22 weeks of gestation | 109 high-risk women and 145 low-risk women | 16S rRNA gene sequencing at V3-V4 region |
| ( | |
| Park et al. | Korea | At 15-34 weeks of gestation | 38 PTB cases and 56 term controls | Multiplex quantitative real-time PCR | Although most values for single bacteria were not statistically significant, the mean value of the total Bacillus class showed a significant difference between PTB and TB groups, in which the mean value of | ( | |
| Payne et al. | Australia | At 12-23 weeks of gestation | 936 women (white race predominantly) | Quantitative PCR | Women who delivered at term had a higher level of | ( | |
PTB, preterm birth; TB, term birth; PPROM, preterm prelabor rupture of membranes; DGGE, denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis.