Getting ahead of human-associated microbial decline in Africa: the urgency of sampling in light of epidemiological transition.

IF 14 1区 生物学 Q1 BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Gugulethu T Moyo, Burcu Tepekule, Leolin Katsidzira, Martin J Blaser, C Jessica E Metcalf
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Evidence is growing that human-associated early-life microbial diversity modulates health over the long term, via effects in the infant termed 'immune and metabolic education'. Documenting high microbial diversity contexts, such as in Africa, thus, has rich potential for understanding this aspect of the landscape of health. Yet, change on the continent is occurring rapidly, and microbial communities are shifting as behaviors and diets are altered, and antibiotic use expands; we may be losing the opportunity to obtain relevant data. After introducing what is known about the effects of early life microbial diversity on late life health, we provide an overview of what is known of the current, and expected future, trajectory of human-associated microbial diversity in Africa, introducing data on the core drivers. We argue that critical insights may be lost if better understanding of infant microbial communities in Africa is not obtained soon.

在非洲预防与人类有关的微生物数量下降:鉴于流行病学转变,取样的紧迫性。
越来越多的证据表明,与人类有关的早期微生物多样性通过对婴儿的“免疫和代谢教育”影响,长期调节健康。因此,记录微生物多样性高的环境,例如在非洲,对了解卫生状况的这一方面具有很大的潜力。然而,非洲大陆正在迅速发生变化,随着行为和饮食的改变,微生物群落正在发生变化,抗生素的使用也在扩大;我们可能会失去获得相关数据的机会。在介绍了已知的早期生命微生物多样性对晚年健康的影响之后,我们概述了非洲人类相关微生物多样性当前和预期未来的已知轨迹,并介绍了核心驱动因素的数据。我们认为,如果不能很快更好地了解非洲的婴儿微生物群落,可能会失去关键的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Trends in Microbiology
Trends in Microbiology 生物-生化与分子生物学
CiteScore
25.30
自引率
0.60%
发文量
193
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Trends in Microbiology serves as a comprehensive, multidisciplinary forum for discussing various aspects of microbiology, spanning cell biology, immunology, genetics, evolution, virology, bacteriology, protozoology, and mycology. In the rapidly evolving field of microbiology, technological advancements, especially in genome sequencing, impact prokaryote biology from pathogens to extremophiles, influencing developments in drugs, vaccines, and industrial enzyme research.
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