| Literature DB >> 35745496 |
Md Jahangir Alam1, Liang Xie1,2, Yu-Anne Yap3, Francine Z Marques2,4, Remy Robert3.
Abstract
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a globally prevalent skin inflammation with a particular impact on children. Current therapies for AD are challenged by the limited armamentarium and the high heterogeneity of the disease. A novel promising therapeutic target for AD is the microbiota. Numerous studies have highlighted the involvement of the skin and gut microbiota in the pathogenesis of AD. The resident microbiota at these two epithelial tissues can modulate skin barrier functions and host immune responses, thus regulating AD progression. For example, the pathogenic roles of Staphylococcus aureus in the skin are well-established, making this bacterium an attractive target for AD treatment. Targeting the gut microbiota is another therapeutic strategy for AD. Multiple oral supplements with prebiotics, probiotics, postbiotics, and synbiotics have demonstrated promising efficacy in both AD prevention and treatment. In this review, we summarize the association of microbiota dysbiosis in both the skin and gut with AD, and the current knowledge of the functions of commensal microbiota in AD pathogenesis. Furthermore, we discuss the existing therapies in manipulating both the skin and gut commensal microbiota to prevent or treat AD. We also propose potential novel therapies based on the cutting-edge progress in this area.Entities:
Keywords: G-protein-coupled receptors; aryl hydrocarbon receptors; atopic dermatitis; fecal microbiota transplantation; gut microbiota; histone deacetylases; metabolites; short-chain fatty acids; skin microbiota; toll-like receptors
Year: 2022 PMID: 35745496 PMCID: PMC9228373 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens11060642
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Summary of the studies demonstrating the dysbiosis of skin microbiota in AD.
| Year | Subjects, Numbers | Methods | Results (Alternations of Skin Microbiota) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | 11 Infants with AD and 12 healthy controls | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD infants: ↓ | [ |
| 2012 | 12 Children with AD and | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD lesion: ↑ | [ |
| 2013 | 13 AD patients and 49 healthy controls | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD patients: ↑ | [ |
| 2015 | 21 AD infants and 17 healthy controls | Real-time PCR analysis of skin scratches | AD infants: ↑ | [ |
| 2016 | 128 AD patients (59 young children at 2–12 years, 13 teenagers at 13–17 years, and 56 adults at 18–62 years of age), 68 age-matched healthy controls (13 young children, 10 teenagers, 45 adults) | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | Children with AD: | [ |
| 2016 | Three male first cousins aged 50–53 years | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD patients: ↑ | [ |
| 2017 | 10 AD infants, 10 age-matched healthy controls | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD infants: ↑ | [ |
| 2017 | 49 AD patients and 30 non-AD subjects | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD patients: ↓ | [ |
| 2017 | 27 AD patients and 6 healthy controls | High-throughput pyrosequencing | AD patients: | [ |
| 2018 | 10 AD patients and 10 healthy controls | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD patients: ↑ | [ |
| 2019 | 91 AD patients, 134 psoriasis patients, and 126 healthy controls | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD patients: ↑ | [ |
| 2019 | 172 AD patients and 120 healthy controls | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD patients: ↑ | [ |
| 2020 | 11 AD patients | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD skin lesions: ↑ | [ |
| 2020 | 67 AD patients and 28 healthy controls | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD skin lesion: | [ |
| 2020 | 7 AD patients and 10 healthy controls | 16S rRNA gene sequencing, and | AD patients: | [ |
| 2021 | 28 AD patients and 14 healthy controls | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD patients: ↑ | [ |
Legend: SLST, single-locus sequencing typing.
Figure 1Mechanisms of how skin microbiota regulates AD pathogenesis. Excessive S. aureus colonization on the skin leads to the formation of biofilms and the secretion of virulence factors. These virulence factors facilitate mast cell degranulation, enhance inflammatory cytokine productions and the release of histamine, and increase IgE levels. In addition, S. aureus directly stimulates keratinocytes (KC) and Langerhans cells (LC) to release proinflammatory cytokines, including TH2 cytokines, TSLP, IL-8, and IL-1β, thus inducing TH2 differentiation and inflammation. Together, excessive cutaneous S. aureus colonization promotes AD pathogenesis. Conversely, commensal Coagulase-negative staphylococci (CoNS) inhibit the colonization of S. aureus by producing lantibiotics, PSMγ, and PSMδ. They also inhibit S. aureus biofilm formation by producing the serine protease glutamyl endopeptidase (Esp). Tryptophan metabolites derived from skin microbiota can activate AHR, thus inhibiting TSLP production by KCs and improving the epidermal barrier of the skin. AHR, aryl hydrocarbon receptor; AHRE, AHR element; AMPs, antimicrobial peptides; CoNS, Coagulase-negative staphylococci; IAId, indole-3-aldehyde; IL, interleukin; ILC3, lymphoid cells type 3; KC, keratinocyte; LC, Langerhans cell; PSM, phenol-soluble modulin, TSLP, thymic stromal lymphopoietin; SE, Staphylococcal enterotoxin; TSST-1, toxic shock syndrome toxin-1. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 4 May 2022).
Summary of clinical studies demonstrating the alternation of gut microbiota in patients with AD.
| Year | Subjects, Numbers | Methods | Results (Alternations of Gut Microbiota) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1999 | Two-year aged children; 13 Estonian and 14 Swedish allergic subjects; 16 Estonian and 19 Swedish nonallergic subjects | Culture | Allergic subjects: ↑Aerobic bacteria, ↑Coliforms, ↑ | [ |
| 2001 | 22 atopic infants and 54 nonatopic infants | Culture, FISH | Atopic infants: ↑Clostridia | [ |
| 2001 | Two-year aged children; 9 Estonian and 9 Swedish AD/allergic subjects; 13 Estonian and 11 Swedish healthy subjects | Culture | AD/allergic subjects: ↓Enterococci, ↓ | [ |
| 2003 | 30 AD patients and 68 healthy individuals | Culture | AD patients: ↓ | [ |
| 2006 | 21 AD toddlers and 28 healthy toddlers | Culture, FISH, quantitative flow cytometry, 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD toddlers: ↓ | [ |
| 2006 | 26 AD infants and 52 healthy infants | PCR, 16S rRNA DGGE profile | Infants who developed AD within the first year of life: ↑ | [ |
| 2007 | 10 allergic infants and 16 healthy infants | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | Allergic infants: ↑ | [ |
| 2007 | 324 infants | Culture | AD infants: ↑ | [ |
| 2007 | 957 infants with high risk of allergic diseases | Real-time PCR | Subjects with higher risk of AD: ↑ | [ |
| 2008 | 37 AD infants and 24 heathy infants | TTGE, FISH | AD infants: ↑ | [ |
| 2008 | 9 AD infants and 12 healthy infants | DGGE | AD infants: ↓-diversity | [ |
| 2008 | 15 AD infants and 20 healthy infants | T-RFLP, TTGE | AD infants: ↓-diversity | [ |
| 2010 | 19 AD infants and 22 healthy infants | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD infants: ↓ | [ |
| 2011 | 3303 children | Real-time PCR | AD children: ↑ | [ |
| 2011 | 411 infants with high risk of allergic diseases | PCR, 16S rRNA DGGE profile | ↓-diversity | [ |
| 2012 | 20 AD infants and 20 healthy infants | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD infants: ↓-diversity, ↑ | [ |
| 2012 | 33 AD infants and 65 healthy infants | T-RFLP | AD infants: ↓-diversity | [ |
| 2013 | 1402 infants | Real-time PCR | AD infants: ↑Clostridia | [ |
| 2015 | 28 AD infants and 11 healthy infants | HITChip | AD infants: ↓-diversity, ↓Butyrate-producing bacteria, ↓ | [ |
| 2016 | 298 neonates | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | Childhood AD history: ↓ | [ |
| 2016 | 19 AD infants and 14 healthy infants | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD infants: ↑ | [ |
| 2016 | 50 AD infants and 51 healthy infants | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD infants: ↑ | [ |
| 2016 | 90 AD patients and 42 healthy subjects | 16S rRNA gene sequencing and metagenomic sequencing | AD patients: A subspecies with of ↑ | [ |
| 2016 | 12 AD infants and 12 healthy infants | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD infants: ↑Clostridia | [ |
| 2018 | 63 AD infants and 66 healthy infants | Metagenomic sequencing and real-time PCR | AD infants: Microbial genes associated with PI3K-Akt signalling, estrogen signalling, NOD-like receptor signalling, ↑antigen processing and presentation | [ |
| 2020 | 105 children | Metagenomic sequencing | AD children: ↓Microbial genes encoding carbohydrate active enzymes (CAZymes) from SCFA producers | [ |
| 2020 | 81 AD children and 58 healthy children | Real-time PCR | AD children: ↑ | [ |
| 2021 | 44 AD patients and 49 healthy subjects | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD patients: ↓α-diversity, ↑ | [ |
| 2021 | 1440 children | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | AD children: ↓α-diversity, ↓ | [ |
Legend: FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridization; AD, atopic dermatitis; DGGE, denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis; TTGE, temporal temperature gel electrophoresis; T-RFLP, terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism; HITChip, the phylogenetic Human Intestinal Tract chip; PI3K, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase; NOD, nucleotide-binding domain.
Figure 2Mechanisms of how gut microbiota regulate AD pathogenesis. Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) produced by the gut microbiota are able to activate SCFA-sensing G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) and/or inhibit histone deacetylases (HDACs), thus activating downstream signalling cascades that suppress inflammatory responses and restoring TH1/TH2 balance. Microbial metabolite, D-tryptophan can also restore TH1/TH2 balance. Bifidobacteria, a genus of bacteria to which many probiotics belong, are an important source of these metabolites. Microbial tryptophan metabolites can activate the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR), which inhibits inflammatory responses and improve the epidermal barrier of skin. Pathogen-associated molecular patterns produced by the gut microbiota can activate toll-like receptors (TLRs) thus restoring TH1/TH2 balance. All these mechanisms benefit AD. IAld, indole-3-aldehyde; IAA, indole-3-acetic acid; IPA, indole-3-propionic acid; TA, tryptamine; ARNT, aryl hydrocarbon receptor nuclear translocator. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 4 May 2022).
Summary of the randomized clinical trials using probiotics to prevent or treat AD.
| Year | Completed Participants | Probiotics Used | Intervention Route and Duration | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| 2001 | 132 children with high risk of allergy and their mothers; 64 in probiotic group vs. 68 in placebo group | Oral/2–4 weeks prenatally + 6 months postnatally (by either mothers or infants) | Probiotic group: ↓incidence of AD in the first year of life and at 4 years of age | [ | |
| 2007 | 178 children with atopic mothers; 89 in probiotic group vs. 89 in placebo group | Oral/the first 6 months of life | Probiotic group: no effect on AD in the first year of life, ↑incidence of allergen sensitization | [ | |
| 2008 | 94 children with high risk of allergy and their mothers; 50 in probiotic group vs. 44 in placebo group | LGG | Oral/2–4 weeks prenatally + 6 months postnatally (by either mothers or infants) | Probiotic group: no effect on AD at 2 years of age, ↑incidence of recurrent wheezing bronchitis | [ |
| 2008 | 474 children with high risk of allergy and their mothers; 157 in HN001 group vs. 158 in HN019 group vs. 159 in placebo group | Oral/From 35 weeks gestation until 2 years postnatally (by mothers and children) | HN001 group: ↓incidence of AD at 2 years, 4 years, 6 years, and 11 years of age; HN019 group: no effect | [ | |
| 2009 | 245 Asian infants with high risk of allergy; 124 in probiotics group vs. 121 in placebo group | Oral/The first 6 months of life | No effect at 1 year of age | [ | |
| 2010 | 112 children with high risk of allergy and their mothers; 57 in probiotics group vs. 55 in placebo group | Oral/4–8 weeks prenatally + 6 months postnatally (by either mothers or infants) | Probiotics group: ↓incidence of AD in the first year of life | [ | |
| 2010 | 278 children and their mother; 138 in probiotics group vs. 140 in placebo group | Combination of LGG, | Oral/From 36 weeks of gestation until 3 months postnatally during breastfeeding by mothers | Probiotics group: ↓incidence of AD at 2 years and 6 years of age, ↓TH22, No adverse effect | [ |
| 2011 | 250 children with high risk of allergy and their mothers; 125 in probiotic group vs. 125 in placebo group | LGG | Oral/From 36 weeks of gestation until delivery | Probiotic group: no effect on AD in the first year of life, ↓CD14 and IgA in maternal breast milk | [ |
| 2014 | 158 children and their mothers; 122 in probiotics group vs. 36 in placebo group | Combination of | Oral/1 month prenatally + 6 months postnatally by infants | Probiotics group: ↓incidence of AD at 10 and 18 months of age, ↓fecal Proteobacteria, no adverse effect | [ |
| 2018 | 423 children with high risk of allergy and their mothers; 212 in HN001 group vs. 211 in placebo group | Oral/From 14–16 weeks of gestation until 6 years postnatally during breastfeeding by mothers | No effect on infantile AD | [ | |
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| 2000 | 27 infants with AD; 9 in LGG group vs. 9 in Bb-12 group vs. 9 in placebo group | LGG, | Oral/3 months | Probiotic groups: ↓AD symptoms, ↓serum soluble CD4, ↓urine eosinophilic protein X | [ |
| 2003 | 35 infants with AD; 14 in LGG group vs. 13 in heat-inactivated LGG group vs. 8 in placebo group | LGG | Oral/7.5 weeks | LGG group: ↓AD symptoms | [ |
| 2003 | 43 children with AD; 20 in placebo→probiotics, 23 in probiotics→placebo | Mixture of | Oral/First intervention (6 weeks)→Washout (6 weeks)→Second intervention (6 weeks) | Probiotics treatment: ↓AD symptoms, ↓serum eosinophil cationic proteins | [ |
| 2004 | 80 in LGG group, 76 in mix group, 74 in placebo group | LGG, Mixture of 4 probiotics (Mix, LGG, | Oral/4 weeks | Generally, no obvious effect, Probiotics group: ↓IgE sensitized AD | [ |
| 2005 | 53 children with moderate-severe AD (Topical corticosteroids were permitted); 26 in probiotic group vs. 27 in placebo group | Oral/8 weeks | Probiotics treatment: ↓AD symptoms | [ | |
| 2006 | 59 children with AD; 29 in probiotics group vs. 30 in placebo group | Mixture of LGG and | Oral/18 weeks | All participants probiotics: ↓AD symptoms (non-significant); within food sensitized participants, probiotics group: ↓AD symptoms (significant) | [ |
| 2006 | 50 infants with AD; 17 in Lrh group, 16 in LGG group, 17 in placebo group | Oral/3 months | No therapeutic effect and no immune difference | [ | |
| 2006 | 53 infants with moderate-severe AD (Emollients, class I–II topical corticosteroids and antihistamines were permitted); 26 in probiotic group, 27 in placebo group | LGG | Oral/8 weeks | No therapeutic effect | [ |
| 2007 | 102 infants with mild-moderate AD; 54 in probiotic group, 48 in placebo group | LGG | Oral/12 weeks | No therapeutic effect | [ |
| 2010 | 88 children with AD; 45 in probiotic group vs. 43 in placebo group | Oral/12 weeks | Probiotic group: ↓AD symptoms, ↓serum CCL17 and CCL27 | [ | |
| 2011 | 141 children with AD; 45 in LP group, 47 in BL group, 47 in placebo group | Oral/3 months | No therapeutic effect | [ | |
| 2011 | 38 adult AD patients; 19 in probiotic group vs. 19 in placebo group | Oral/16 weeks | Probiotic group: ↓AD symptoms, ↓fecal load of | [ | |
| 2012 | 46 adult AD patients; 31 in probiotics group vs. 15 in placebo group | The combination of | Oral/12 weeks | Probiotics group: ↓AD symptoms, ↓plasma LPS, ↓activated T cells, ↑TH1, ↓TH2, ↓TH17, ↑ Treg cells, ↓fecal | [ |
| 2012 | 118 children with AD (Emollients were permitted); 58 in probiotic group vs. 60 in placebo group | Oral/12 weeks | Probiotic group: ↓AD symptoms, ↓total eosinophil count, ↓IL-4 and IFNγ in blood | [ | |
| 2014 | 25 adult AD patients; 13 in probiotics group vs. 12 in placebo group | Oral/1 month | Probiotic group: ↓AD symptoms | [ | |
| 2014 | 44 adult AD patients (Medications without probiotic effect and corticosteroid application were permitted); 22 in probiotic group vs. 22 in placebo group | Oral/8 weeks | Probiotic group: ↓AD symptoms, ↑fecal Lactobacilli, ↑fecal kynurenic acid | [ | |
| 2015 | 212 children with moderate-severe AD; 55 in LP group vs. 53 in LF group vs. 51 in LP + LF group vs. 53 in placebo group | Oral/3 months | LP group, LF group and LP + LF group: ↓AD symptoms, ↓serum IL-4, IgE, TNF, ↑serum IFN, TGF, ↓urine eosinophilic protein X, 8-OHdG | [ | |
| 2017 | 62 children with AD; 30 in probiotic group vs. 32 in placebo group | Oral/8 weeks | Probiotic group: ↓AD symptoms | [ | |
| 2017 | 22 children with AD; 12 in probiotic group vs. 10 in placebo group | Oral/12 weeks | Probiotic group: ↓AD symptoms, ↓serum IL-4, IFNγ, IL-17, ↑serum IL-10↑, ↑Treg cells in blood | [ | |
| 2018 | 50 children with moderate AD who were prescribed topical steroids; 26 in probiotics group vs. 24 in placebo group | Mixture of | Oral/12 weeks | Probiotics group: ↓AD symptoms, ↓steroids treatment | [ |
| 2020 | 109 adult AD patients; 29 in CCFM16 group vs. 43 in CCFM8610 group vs. 11 in oligosaccharide group vs. 26 in placebo group | Oral/8 weeks | [ | ||
| 2020 | 82 children with mild-moderate AD; 41 in probiotic group vs. 41 in placebo group |
| Oral/12 weeks | Generally, no obvious effect, probiotic group: ↓IgE sensitized AD, (no difference in cytokine levels and microbial diversities) | [ |
| 2021 | 134 children with AD; 66 in probiotics group vs. 68 in placebo group | Oral/3 months | Probiotics group: ↓AD symptoms | [ | |
| 2021 | 80 adult AD patients; 40 in Probiotics group vs. 40 in placebo group | Oral/56 days | Probiotics group: ↓AD symptoms, ↓skin TNF and TSLP | [ | |