Costerton Biofilm Center, Department of Immunology and Microbiology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Centre for GeoGenetics, Natural History Museum, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
mBio. 2020 Feb 11;11(1):e02945-19. doi: 10.1128/mBio.02945-19.
Human skin microbiota has been described as a "microbial fingerprint" due to observed differences between individuals. Current understanding of the cutaneous microbiota is based on sampling the outermost layers of the epidermis, while the microbiota in the remaining skin layers has not yet been fully characterized. Environmental conditions can vary drastically between the cutaneous compartments and give rise to unique communities. We demonstrate that the dermal microbiota is surprisingly similar among individuals and contains a specific subset of the epidermal microbiota. Variability in bacterial community composition decreased significantly from the epidermal to the dermal compartment but was similar among anatomic locations (hip and knee). The composition of the epidermal microbiota was more strongly affected by environmental factors than that of the dermal community. These results indicate a well-conserved dermal community that is functionally distinct from the epidermal community, challenging the current dogma. Future studies in cutaneous disorders and chronic infections may benefit by focusing on the dermal microbiota as a persistent microbial community. Human skin microbiota is thought to be unique according to the individual's lifestyle and genetic predisposition. This is true for the epidermal microbiota, while our findings demonstrate that the dermal microbiota is universal between healthy individuals. The preserved dermal microbial community is compositionally unique and functionally distinct to the specific environment in the depth of human skin. It is expected to have direct contact with the immune response of the human host, and research in the communication between host and microbiota should be targeted to this cutaneous compartment. This novel insight into specific microbial adaptation can be used advantageously in the research of chronic disorders and infections of the skin. It can enlighten the alteration between health and disease to the benefit of patients suffering from long-lasting socioeconomic illnesses.
人类皮肤微生物群被描述为一种“微生物指纹”,因为个体之间存在差异。目前对皮肤微生物群的理解是基于对表皮最外层的采样,而皮肤其余层的微生物群尚未得到充分描述。皮肤的不同部位环境条件可能会有很大差异,从而产生独特的群落。我们证明,真皮微生物群在个体之间惊人地相似,并且包含表皮微生物群的特定子集。从表皮到真皮层,细菌群落组成的可变性显著降低,但在解剖部位(臀部和膝盖)之间相似。表皮微生物群的组成受环境因素的影响比真皮群落更大。这些结果表明,真皮群落具有良好的保守性,与表皮群落在功能上不同,这对当前的观点提出了挑战。未来在皮肤疾病和慢性感染方面的研究可能受益于将真皮微生物群作为一种持续存在的微生物群落进行研究。根据个体的生活方式和遗传倾向,人类皮肤微生物群被认为是独特的。这对于表皮微生物群是正确的,而我们的研究结果表明,健康个体之间的真皮微生物群是普遍存在的。保留的真皮微生物群落在组成上是独特的,并且与人类皮肤深处的特定环境在功能上是不同的。它有望与人类宿主的免疫反应直接接触,宿主与微生物群之间的交流研究应该针对这一皮肤部位进行。这种对特定微生物适应性的新见解可以在皮肤慢性疾病和感染的研究中得到很好的利用。它可以阐明健康与疾病之间的转变,使患有长期经济社会疾病的患者受益。