Research and Exploratory Development, Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel, MD, USA.
Department of Bioengineering, Clemson University, Clemson, SC, USA.
Microbiome. 2021 Jan 22;9(1):22. doi: 10.1186/s40168-020-00963-1.
Skin, the largest organ of the human body by weight, hosts a diversity of microorganisms that can influence health. The microbial residents of the skin are now appreciated for their roles in host immune interactions, wound healing, colonization resistance, and various skin disorders. Still, much remains to be discovered in terms of the host pathways influenced by skin microorganisms, as well as the higher-level skin properties impacted through these microbe-host interactions. Towards this direction, recent efforts using mouse models point to pronounced changes in the transcriptional profiles of the skin in response to the presence of a microbial community. However, there is a need to quantify the roles of microorganisms at both the individual and community-level in healthy human skin. In this study, we utilize human skin equivalents to study the effects of individual taxa and a microbial community in a precisely controlled context. Through transcriptomics analysis, we identify key genes and pathways influenced by skin microbes, and we also characterize higher-level impacts on skin processes and properties through histological analyses.
The presence of a microbiome on a 3D skin tissue model led to significantly altered patterns of gene expression, influencing genes involved in the regulation of apoptosis, proliferation, and the extracellular matrix (among others). Moreover, microbiome treatment influenced the thickness of the epidermal layer, reduced the number of actively proliferating cells, and increased filaggrin expression. Many of these findings were evident upon treatment with the mixed community, but either not detected or less pronounced in treatments by single microorganisms, underscoring the impact that a diverse skin microbiome has on the host.
This work contributes to the understanding of how microbiome constituents individually and collectively influence human skin processes and properties. The results show that, while it is important to understand the effect of individual microbes on the host, a full community of microbes has unique and pronounced effects on the skin. Thus, in its impacts on the host, the skin microbiome is more than the sum of its parts. Video abstract.
皮肤是人体最大的器官,按重量计算,它容纳了多种微生物,这些微生物可以影响健康。皮肤的微生物居民现在因其在宿主免疫相互作用、伤口愈合、定植抵抗和各种皮肤疾病中的作用而受到重视。然而,就皮肤微生物影响宿主途径以及通过这些微生物-宿主相互作用影响皮肤更高层次特性而言,仍有许多有待发现。为了实现这一目标,最近利用小鼠模型的努力表明,皮肤微生物的存在会导致皮肤转录谱发生明显变化。然而,需要定量评估微生物在健康人体皮肤中的个体和群体水平上的作用。在这项研究中,我们利用人体皮肤等效物在精确控制的环境中研究个体分类群和微生物群落的作用。通过转录组学分析,我们确定了受皮肤微生物影响的关键基因和途径,并且还通过组织学分析来描述对皮肤过程和特性的更高层次影响。
在 3D 皮肤组织模型上存在微生物群会导致基因表达模式发生显著改变,影响参与细胞凋亡、增殖和细胞外基质调节的基因(以及其他基因)。此外,微生物群处理会影响表皮层的厚度,减少活跃增殖细胞的数量,并增加丝聚蛋白的表达。这些发现中的许多在混合微生物群处理时是明显的,但在单一微生物处理时要么没有检测到,要么不太明显,这突出了多样化的皮肤微生物群对宿主的影响。
这项工作有助于理解微生物群成分如何单独和集体影响人体皮肤过程和特性。结果表明,虽然了解单个微生物对宿主的影响很重要,但微生物的完整群落对皮肤有独特而显著的影响。因此,在对宿主的影响方面,皮肤微生物群不仅仅是其各个部分的总和。视频摘要。