Department of Agriculture, Food and Nutritional Sciences, 4-126 Li Ka Shing Centre for Health Research Innovation, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 2E1, Canada.
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, University of Calgary, Cumming School of Medicine, 3330 Hospital Drive NW, Calgary, Alberta, T2N 4N1, Canada.
Microbiome. 2017 Apr 28;5(1):48. doi: 10.1186/s40168-017-0268-4.
After more than a century of active research, the notion that the human fetal environment is sterile and that the neonate's microbiome is acquired during and after birth was an accepted dogma. However, recent studies using molecular techniques suggest bacterial communities in the placenta, amniotic fluid, and meconium from healthy pregnancies. These findings have led many scientists to challenge the "sterile womb paradigm" and propose that microbiome acquisition instead begins in utero, an idea that would fundamentally change our understanding of gut microbiota acquisition and its role in human development. In this review, we provide a critical assessment of the evidence supporting these two opposing hypotheses, specifically as it relates to (i) anatomical, immunological, and physiological characteristics of the placenta and fetus; (ii) the research methods currently used to study microbial populations in the intrauterine environment; (iii) the fecal microbiome during the first days of life; and (iv) the generation of axenic animals and humans. Based on this analysis, we argue that the evidence in support of the "in utero colonization hypothesis" is extremely weak as it is founded almost entirely on studies that (i) used molecular approaches with an insufficient detection limit to study "low-biomass" microbial populations, (ii) lacked appropriate controls for contamination, and (iii) failed to provide evidence of bacterial viability. Most importantly, the ability to reliably derive axenic animals via cesarean sections strongly supports sterility of the fetal environment in mammals. We conclude that current scientific evidence does not support the existence of microbiomes within the healthy fetal milieu, which has implications for the development of clinical practices that prevent microbiome perturbations after birth and the establishment of future research priorities.
经过一个多世纪的积极研究,人们普遍认为胎儿所处的环境是无菌的,新生儿的微生物组是在出生过程中和出生后获得的。然而,最近使用分子技术的研究表明,在健康妊娠的胎盘、羊水和胎便中存在细菌群落。这些发现促使许多科学家质疑“无菌子宫范式”,并提出微生物组的获取实际上是从宫内开始的,这一观点将从根本上改变我们对肠道微生物组获取及其在人类发育中的作用的理解。在这篇综述中,我们批判性地评估了支持这两种对立假设的证据,特别是与以下方面有关:(i)胎盘和胎儿的解剖学、免疫学和生理学特征;(ii)目前用于研究宫内环境中微生物群的研究方法;(iii)生命最初几天的粪便微生物组;以及(iv)无菌动物和人类的产生。基于这一分析,我们认为支持“宫内定植假说”的证据非常薄弱,因为它几乎完全基于以下研究:(i)使用分子方法,其检测限不足以研究“低生物量”微生物群;(ii)缺乏对污染的适当对照;以及(iii)未能提供细菌存活的证据。最重要的是,通过剖腹产可靠地获得无菌动物强烈支持哺乳动物胎儿环境的无菌性。我们的结论是,目前的科学证据并不支持健康胎儿环境中存在微生物组,这对预防出生后微生物组扰动的临床实践的发展和未来研究重点的建立具有重要意义。