Cao Jessica, Meltzer Rebecca, Cohn Ellen, Benjamin Andrew, Keskey Robert, Alverdy John
Department of Surgery, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
Gut Microbes. 2025 Dec;17(1):2552346. doi: 10.1080/19490976.2025.2552346. Epub 2025 Aug 29.
The connections between host physiology and the gut microbiome continue to grow as we learn how both the composition and function of the microbiota can impact organ systems beyond the gastrointestinal tract (e.g. the liver, lungs, kidneys, brain). An individual's unique life history plays an important role in shaping the gut microbiota, whose composition and functional output may influence the clinical course and outcomes following a major physiologic perturbation such as surgery or trauma in a manner that extends beyond host genetics. Alterations in the gut microbiota that occur during the course of an illness may explain some of the heterogeneity seen in both recovery and the development of complications. Here, we challenge traditional perspectives on infectious complications, in which pathogenic strains of bacteria are considered to be the sole perpetrators. In this review, we instead examine the crosstalk between the pathogen, the host, and its colonizing microbiome - termed the "interactome"-and explore its role in driving disease progression or recovery following major physiologic perturbations including surgery, trauma, and critical illness.
随着我们了解微生物群的组成和功能如何影响胃肠道以外的器官系统(如肝脏、肺、肾脏、大脑),宿主生理学与肠道微生物群之间的联系不断增加。个体独特的生活史在塑造肠道微生物群方面起着重要作用,其组成和功能输出可能以超越宿主遗传学的方式影响重大生理扰动(如手术或创伤)后的临床过程和结果。疾病过程中发生的肠道微生物群改变可能解释了恢复和并发症发展中出现的一些异质性。在这里,我们挑战了关于感染性并发症的传统观点,在传统观点中,细菌的致病菌株被认为是唯一的肇事者。在这篇综述中,我们转而研究病原体、宿主及其定植微生物群之间的相互作用——称为“相互作用组”——并探讨其在重大生理扰动(包括手术、创伤和危重病)后推动疾病进展或恢复中的作用。