Channing Division of Network Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Channing Division of Network Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Trends Mol Med. 2022 Aug;28(8):619-630. doi: 10.1016/j.molmed.2022.05.005. Epub 2022 Jun 30.
Industrial advances have caused significant loss of diversity in our gut microbiome, potentially increasing our susceptibility to many diseases. Recently, rewilding the human gut microbiome - that is, bringing it back to an ancestral or preindustrial state (e.g., by transplanting stool material from donors in nonindustrial societies) - has been hotly debated from medical, ethical, and evolutionary perspectives. Here we propose an alternative solution: rejuvenating the human gut microbiome by stool banking and autologous fecal microbiota transplantation, that is, collecting the hosts' stool samples at a younger age when they are at optimal health, and cryopreserving the samples in a stool bank for the hosts' own future use. In this article we discuss the motivation, applications, feasibility, and challenges of this solution.
工业进步导致我们肠道微生物组的多样性显著丧失,可能使我们更容易患上许多疾病。最近,从医学、伦理和进化的角度来看,使人类肠道微生物组“返璞归真”——也就是说,使其恢复到祖先或工业化前的状态(例如,将非工业化社会供体的粪便材料移植到体内)——这一话题引发了激烈的争论。在这里,我们提出了一个替代方案:通过粪便库和自体粪菌移植来使人类肠道微生物组“年轻化”,也就是说,在宿主处于最佳健康状态的年轻时收集他们的粪便样本,并将样本在粪便库中冷冻保存,以备宿主将来使用。在本文中,我们讨论了这个方案的动机、应用、可行性和挑战。