| Literature DB >> 35454968 |
Chenlin Hu1, Piotr Rzymski2,3.
Abstract
Gut microorganisms are comprised of thousands of species and play an important role in the host's metabolism, overall health status, and risk of disease. Recently, the discovery of non-photosynthetic cyanobacteria (class "Melainabacteria") in the human and animal gut triggered a broad interest in studying cyanobacteria's evolution, physiology, and ecological relevance of the Melainabacteria members. In the present paper, we review the general characteristics of Melainabacteria, their phylogeny, distribution, and ecology. The potential link between these microorganisms and human health is also discussed based on available human-microbiome studies. Their abundance tends to increase in patients with selected neurodegenerative, gastrointestinal, hepatic, metabolic, and respiratory diseases. However, the available evidence is correlative and requires further longitudinal studies. Although the research on Melainabacteria in the human gut is still in its infancy, elucidation of their role appears important in better understanding microbiome-human health interactions. Further studies aiming to identify particular gut cyanobacteria species, culture them in vitro, and characterize them on the molecular, biochemical, and physiological levels are encouraged.Entities:
Keywords: Melainabacteria; gut; human disease; human microbiome; non-photosynthetic cyanobacteria
Year: 2022 PMID: 35454968 PMCID: PMC9029806 DOI: 10.3390/life12040476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Life (Basel) ISSN: 2075-1729
Characteristics of the representative Melainabacteria members for which the whole genome was sequenced.
| Strain | Environment | Genome Size (Mbp) | Completeness | GC | Anaerobic | Flagella | Shape | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Order Gastranaerophilales | ||||||||
|
| aquifer | 3.0 | Near Complete | 33.5 | anaerobic | + | N.A. | [ |
|
| human gut | 1.9 | Complete | 32.9 | anaerobic | − | N.A. | [ |
|
| human gut | 1.2 | Partial | 30.6 | anaerobic | − | N.A. | [ |
|
| human gut | 2.3 | Complete | 35.3 | anaerobic | + | N.A. | [ |
|
| human gut | 2.3 | Complete | 36.3 | anaerobic | + | N.A. | [ |
|
| human gut | 2.1 | Complete | 34.1 | anaerobic | − | N.A. | [ |
|
| human gut | 2.2 | Near Complete | 35.3 | anaerobic | − | N.A. | [ |
|
| human gut | 1.3 | Partial | 29.9 | anaerobic | − | N.A. | [ |
|
| termite gut | 0.96 | Partial | 42.5 | anaerobic | + | Rod | [ |
|
| koala gut | 1.8 | complete | 38.5 | anaerobic | − | N.A. | [ |
|
| koala gut | 2 a | Near Complete | 34.9 | anaerobic | − | N.A. | [ |
|
| koala gut | 2.2 a | Near Complete | 36.7 | anaerobic | − | N.A. | [ |
|
| human gut | 2.2 | complete | 34.1 | anaerobic | − | N.A. | [ |
|
| ||||||||
|
| bioreactor | 1.8 | complete | 27.5 | anaerobic | − | N.A. | [ |
|
| ||||||||
|
| bioreactor | 5.5 | near complete | 49.4 | microaerophilic | − | N.A. | [ |
|
| ||||||||
|
| coculture | 3.0 | complete | 51.4 | microaerophilic | + | N.A. | [ |
|
| algal cultivation ponds | 2.8 | near complete | 54.8 | microaerophilic | + | Sphere | [ |
|
| algal cultivation ponds | 3.0 | near complete | 53.0 | microaerophilic | + | Sphere | [ |
a—Predicted genome size that was calculated according to the completeness of the whole genome sequencing; N.A.—not available.
Summary of the potential association of gut cyanobacterial abundance with human health and diseases.
| Country | Year | Subject | Disease | Gut Cyanobacterial | Remark | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 2020 | Control group ( | Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis | Disease group > control group | The finding indicated that cyanobacteria could be involved in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases | [ |
|
| 2021 | 3-year old healthy children ( | Neurodevelopment disorder | Gut cyanobacteria negatively correlated with the neurodevelopment in Adaptation | The finding implied the negative effect of cyanobacteria on neurodevelopment in adaptation | [ |
|
| 2016 | Control group ( | Colon | Disease group > control | The finding implied the association between the colorectal pre-neoplastic lesion and the increase in gut cyanobacterial abundance. | [ |
|
| 2021 | Healthy infants ( | Acute gastroenteritis | Disease group > control | The finding implied the association between human norovirus infection and the increase in gut cyanobacteria. | [ |
|
| 2017 | Control group ( | Cirrhosis | Disease group < control | The finding implied the association between cirrhosis and the reduction in gut cyanobacteria. | [ |
|
| 2019 | Hispanic/Latino adults (n = 1647) | Obesity | Gut cyanobacteria negatively correlated with obesity | The finding implied the negative association between obesity and gut cyanobacteria. | [ |
|
| 2020 | Rural community | - | Rural community > urban community | Gut Melainabacteria can be more abundant in the rural populations | [ |
|
| 2020 | Frutcan-sensitive ( | Irritable bowel syndrome | Fructan-sensitive > fructan-tolerant | Fructan-sensitive children were enriched in the gut cyanobacteria during fructan challenge. | [ |
|
| 2020 | Control group ( | Wilson’s Disease | Disease > Control | The finding implied the association between the Wilson’s disease and the higher gut cyanobacterial abundance. | [ |
|
| 2020 | Control group ( | Allergy Rhinitis | Disease > Control | The finding implied the association between allergy rhinitis and the higher gut cyanobacterial abundance. | [ |
|
| 2018 | Healthy controls ( | Lung cancer | Disease group > Control | The lung cancer group had a significantly higher level of gut cyanobacteria compared to the health group. | [ |
|
| 2020 | Smokers ( | - | Gut cyanobacteria positively correlated with exhaled CO levels | The finding implied the positive association between CO level and gut cyanobacteria among the current smokers. | [ |
|
| 2021 | Patients with Graves’ disease ( | Graves’ disease Graves’ orbitopathy | Significant difference in the gut cyanobacterial abundance among the studied groups. | The finding implied the association of the changing gut cyanobacterial abundance with Graves’ disease and Graves’ orbitopathy. | [ |
Figure 1The potential link of gut cyanobacteria with human diseases and health.