| Literature DB >> 35215065 |
Audrey Gueniche1, Olivier Perin1, Amina Bouslimani2, Leslie Landemaine1, Namita Misra1, Sylvie Cupferman1, Luc Aguilar1, Cécile Clavaud1, Tarun Chopra3, Ahmad Khodr1.
Abstract
The microbiome, as a community of microorganisms and their structural elements, genomes, metabolites/signal molecules, has been shown to play an important role in human health, with significant beneficial applications for gut health. Skin microbiome has emerged as a new field with high potential to develop disruptive solutions to manage skin health and disease. Despite an incomplete toolbox for skin microbiome analyses, much progress has been made towards functional dissection of microbiomes and host-microbiome interactions. A standardized and robust investigation of the skin microbiome is necessary to provide accurate microbial information and set the base for a successful translation of innovations in the dermo-cosmetic field. This review provides an overview of how the landscape of skin microbiome research has evolved from method development (multi-omics/data-based analytical approaches) to the discovery and development of novel microbiome-derived ingredients. Moreover, it provides a summary of the latest findings on interactions between the microbiomes (gut and skin) and skin health/disease. Solutions derived from these two paths are used to develop novel microbiome-based ingredients or solutions acting on skin homeostasis are proposed. The most promising skin and gut-derived microbiome interventional strategies are presented, along with regulatory, safety, industrial, and technical challenges related to a successful translation of these microbiome-based concepts/technologies in the dermo-cosmetic industry.Entities:
Keywords: cosmetic; methodology harmonization; microbiome; microbiome data; microbiome metabolites; postbiotics; skin health
Year: 2022 PMID: 35215065 PMCID: PMC8879973 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens11020121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Figure 1(A) Taxonomic analysis of cheek microbiome in younger and older subject’s group. Stacked bar charts showing the relative abundance of the 20 most prevalent bacterial genera. Adapted from [56] (B) Taxonomic analysis of cheek microbiome (younger group) in polluted and non-polluted environment. Stacked bar charts showing the relative abundance of the 20 most prevalent bacterial genera. Adapted from [57].
Major taxonomic modifications of the skin/scalp microbiome in skin diseases.
| Skin Condition | Microbiome Shift | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Atopic Dermatitis (AD) | Decreased microbial diversity | [ |
| Psoriasis | Increase in | [ |
| Acne | Increase in the proportion of | [ |
| Rosacea | Increased in Demodex mites on the skin. | [ |
| Vitiligo | Decrease in bacterial diversity | [ |
| Seborrheic dermatitis (SD) and Dandruff | Increase in | [ |
Resuming the cosmetic description of prebiotic and postbiotic ingredients.
| Postbiotic (Including Probiotic Fraction or Extract) | Prebiotic |
|---|---|
| Non-viable ingredients comprised of inactivated microorganisms and/or soluble factors (products or metabolic by-products) released by live or inactivated microorganisms, added to a cosmetic product to achieve a cosmetic benefit at the application site, either directly or via an effect on the existing microbiota. | Non-viable ingredients are added to a cosmetic product to be actively used as nutrients by the microbiota of the application site to achieve a cosmetic benefit. |
Figure 2Resuming the best strategy for a successful translation of Microbiome-based concepts into cosmetic products of the future. Combined approaches of multi-omics technologies, powerful data mining tools, and representative 3D vitro skin models associated with standardized and unbiased experimental approaches dedicated to skin Microbiome analysis are key. Harnessing recent scientific breakthroughs and deciphering the famous causality question allied to better characterization of the interaction between the microbiome, the immune system and skin cells in various skin conditions would accelerate the translation. Finally, consideration of regulatory and safety aspects related to these new/targeted Microbiome-derived technologies (postbiotics, phages, probiotics…) and how to leverage their performance in different formulation types is essential.