Mores Carine R, Price Travis K, Wolff Birte, Halverson Thomas, Limeira Roberto, Brubaker Linda, Mueller Elizabeth R, Putonti Catherine, Wolfe Alan J
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stritch School of Medicine, Loyola University Chicago, Maywood, IL 60153, USA.
Present address: Department of Biology, Institute of Microbiology and Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland.
Microb Genom. 2021 Mar;7(3). doi: 10.1099/mgen.0.000535. Epub 2021 Feb 25.
Research into the lower urinary tract (LUT) microbiota has primarily focused on its relationship to LUT symptoms (LUTS), taking snapshots of these communities in individuals with and without LUTS. While certain bacterial taxa have been associated with LUTS, or the lack thereof, the temporal dynamics of this community were largely unknown. Recently, we conducted a longitudinal study and found that vaginal intercourse resulted in a shift in species richness and diversity within the LUT microbiota. This is particularly relevant as frequent vaginal intercourse is a major risk factor for urinary tract infection (UTI) in premenopausal women (Aydin 2015;26:795-804). To further investigate the relationship between vaginal intercourse and LUT microbiota, here we present the results of a 3 week study in which daily urogenital specimens were collected from a female participant and her male sexual partner. Consistent with our previous findings, the LUT microbiota changed after vaginal intercourse, most notably a high abundance of was observed post-coitus. We isolated and sequenced from both sexual partners finding that: (i) the isolates from the female partner's urogenital tract were genomically similar throughout the duration of the study, and (ii) they were related to one isolate from the male partner's oral cavity collected at the end of the study, suggesting transmission between the two individuals. We hypothesize that blooms in after vaginal intercourse may play a role in coitus-related UTI. We found that a isolate, in contrast to a isolate displaced after vaginal intercourse, cannot inhibit the growth of uropathogenic . Thus, this bloom in may provide a window of opportunity for a uropathogen to colonize the LUT.
对下尿路(LUT)微生物群的研究主要集中在其与下尿路症状(LUTS)的关系上,对有和没有LUTS的个体的这些群落进行了快照分析。虽然某些细菌类群与LUTS或其缺乏有关,但这个群落的时间动态在很大程度上是未知的。最近,我们进行了一项纵向研究,发现阴道性交导致LUT微生物群内物种丰富度和多样性的变化。这一点特别重要,因为频繁的阴道性交是绝经前女性尿路感染(UTI)的主要危险因素(艾登,2015年;26:795 - 804)。为了进一步研究阴道性交与LUT微生物群之间的关系,在此我们展示一项为期3周的研究结果,在该研究中,每天从一名女性参与者及其男性性伴侣收集泌尿生殖标本。与我们之前的发现一致,阴道性交后LUT微生物群发生了变化,最显著的是性交后观察到大量的[此处原文缺失具体细菌名称]。我们从两个性伴侣中分离并测序了[此处原文缺失具体细菌名称],发现:(i)在整个研究期间,从女性伴侣泌尿生殖道分离出的[此处原文缺失具体细菌名称]菌株在基因组上相似,并且(ii)它们与在研究结束时从男性伴侣口腔分离出的一个菌株相关,这表明两者之间存在传播。我们假设阴道性交后[此处原文缺失具体细菌名称]的大量繁殖可能在与性交相关的UTI中起作用。我们发现,与阴道性交后被取代的[此处原文缺失具体细菌名称]菌株相比,一个[此处原文缺失具体细菌名称]菌株不能抑制尿路致病性[此处原文缺失具体细菌名称]的生长。因此,这种[此处原文缺失具体细菌名称]的大量繁殖可能为尿路病原体在LUT定植提供一个机会窗口。