Human microbiota, blood group antigens, and disease.

IF 7.9 Q1 Medicine
D Rose Ewald, Susan C J Sumner
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引用次数: 28

Abstract

Far from being just "bugs in our guts," the microbiota interacts with the body in previously unimagined ways. Research into the genome and the microbiome has revealed that the human body and the microbiota have a long-established but only recently recognized symbiotic relationship; homeostatic balance between them regulates body function. That balance is fragile, easily disturbed, and plays a fundamental role in human health-our very survival depends on the healthy functioning of these microorganisms. Increasing rates of cardiovascular, autoimmune, and inflammatory diseases, as well as epidemics in obesity and diabetes in recent decades are believed to be explained, in part, by unintended effects on the microbiota from vaccinations, poor diets, environmental chemicals, indiscriminate antibiotic use, and "germophobia." Discovery and exploration of the brain-gut-microbiota axis have provided new insights into functional diseases of the gut, autoimmune and stress-related disorders, and the role of probiotics in treating certain affective disorders; it may even explain some aspects of autism. Research into dietary effects on the human gut microbiota led to its classification into three proposed enterotypes, but also revealed the surprising role of blood group antigens in shaping those populations. Blood group antigens have previously been associated with disease risks; their subsequent association with the microbiota may reveal mechanisms that lead to development of nutritional interventions and improved treatment modalities. Further exploration of associations between specific enteric microbes and specific metabolites will foster new dietary interventions, treatment modalities, and genetic therapies, and inevitably, their application in personalized healthcare strategies. This article is categorized under: Laboratory Methods and Technologies > Metabolomics Translational, Genomic, and Systems Medicine > Translational Medicine Physiology > Mammalian Physiology in Health and Disease.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

人类微生物群,血型抗原和疾病。
微生物群远非“我们肠道中的虫子”,而是以以前无法想象的方式与身体相互作用。对基因组和微生物组的研究表明,人体和微生物群有着长期建立但最近才被认识到的共生关系;它们之间的稳态平衡调节身体功能。这种平衡是脆弱的,很容易被破坏,对人类健康起着根本作用——我们的生存取决于这些微生物的健康功能。近几十年来,心血管、自身免疫和炎症疾病的发病率以及肥胖和糖尿病的流行率不断上升,部分原因被认为是疫苗接种、不良饮食、环境化学物质、滥用抗生素和“细菌恐惧症”对微生物群的意外影响。“脑肠微生物群轴的发现和探索为肠道功能性疾病、自身免疫和压力相关疾病以及益生菌在治疗某些情感障碍中的作用提供了新的见解;它甚至可以解释自闭症的某些方面。对饮食对人类肠道微生物群影响的研究将其分为三种拟议的肠道类型,但还揭示了血型抗原在形成这些群体中的惊人作用。血型抗原以前与疾病风险有关;它们随后与微生物群的联系可能揭示了导致营养干预和改善治疗方式的机制。进一步探索特定肠道微生物和特定代谢产物之间的联系将促进新的饮食干预、治疗模式和基因疗法,并不可避免地将其应用于个性化医疗策略。本文分类如下:实验室方法和技术>代谢组学转化、基因组和系统医学>转化医学生理学>健康与疾病中的哺乳动物生理学。
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
CiteScore
18.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal Name:Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews-Systems Biology and Medicine Focus: Strong interdisciplinary focus Serves as an encyclopedic reference for systems biology research Conceptual Framework: Systems biology asserts the study of organisms as hierarchical systems or networks Individual biological components interact in complex ways within these systems Article Coverage: Discusses biology, methods, and models Spans systems from a few molecules to whole species Topical Coverage: Developmental Biology Physiology Biological Mechanisms Models of Systems, Properties, and Processes Laboratory Methods and Technologies Translational, Genomic, and Systems Medicine
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