与其他原始人相比,人类面部皮肤的微生物群是独一无二的。

IF 5 2区 生物学 Q1 MICROBIOLOGY
mSystems Pub Date : 2025-05-28 DOI:10.1128/msystems.00081-25
Samuel Degregori, Melissa B Manus, Evan B Qu, Calen P Mendall, Jacob S Baker, Lydia M Hopper, Katherine R Amato, Tami D Lieberman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

到目前为止,所有人的面部皮肤微生物组都非常相似,主要是兼性厌氧菌Cutibacterium。这个属的起源是未知的,目前没有从灵长类动物皮肤样本中描述近亲。这种明显的人类特异性细菌分类群可能反映了人类皮肤的独特性,人类皮肤比我们最亲近的灵长类动物的皮肤要油性得多。然而,之前的研究并没有对我们最近的灵长类动物的面部皮肤微生物群进行采样。在这里,我们使用16S和霰弹枪测序对动物园里的黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)和大猩猩(Gorilla Gorilla)以及它们的人类护理人员的皮肤微生物组进行了分析。我们发现面部皮肤微生物组在宿主物种之间存在显著差异,人类的多样性最低,也是三种物种中最独特的群落。我们无法在黑猩猩或大猩猩的面部皮肤上找到与人类特异性一致的Cutibacterium的近亲。原始人皮肤微生物组功能谱与它们的分类谱相比在功能上更相似。然而,我们仍然发现了显著的功能差异,包括人类脂肪酸生物合成比例较低,这与微生物对宿主来源的脂质的依赖一致。我们的研究强调了人类面部皮肤微生物组的独特性,并支持从未知来源水平获取其主要居民。了解人类皮肤上的细菌如何以及为什么与我们最亲近的动物不同,为人类的进化和健康提供了至关重要的见解。虽然我们知道人类面部皮肤上有不同的细菌,尤其是痤疮角质杆菌,但我们不知道这些细菌及其相关基因是否也存在于我们的近亲黑猩猩和大猩猩的脸上。我们的研究表明,人类面部皮肤上的细菌与其他灵长类动物明显不同,痤疮杆菌在人类脸上的数量非常丰富。这一发现表明,这种关键的细菌物种可能已经特别适应了人类皮肤,因为人类皮肤比其他灵长类动物产生更多的油脂。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The microbiome of the human facial skin is unique compared to that of other hominids.

The human facial skin microbiome is remarkably similar across all people sampled to date, dominated by facultative anaerobe Cutibacterium. The origin of this genus is unknown, with no close relatives currently described from samples of primate skin. This apparent human-specific bacterial taxon could reflect the unique nature of human skin, which is significantly more oily than that of our closest primate relatives. However, previous studies have not sampled the facial skin microbiome of our closest primates. Here, we profiled the skin microbiome of zoo-housed chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and gorillas (Gorilla gorilla gorilla), alongside their human care staff, using both 16S and shotgun sequencing. We showed that facial skin microbiomes differ significantly across host species, with humans having the lowest diversity and the most unique community among the three species. We were unable to find a close relative of Cutibacterium on either chimpanzee or gorilla facial skin, consistent with human specificity. Hominid skin microbiome functional profiles were more functionally similar compared to their taxonomic profiles. However, we still found notable functional differences, including lower proportions of fatty acid biosynthesis in humans, consistent with microbes' reliance on host-derived lipids. Our study highlights the uniqueness of the human facial skin microbiome and supports a horizontal acquisition of its dominant resident from a yet unknown source.IMPORTANCEUnderstanding how and why human skin bacteria differ from our closest animal relatives provides crucial insights into human evolution and health. While we have known that human facial skin hosts distinct bacteria-particularly Cutibacterium acnes-we did not know if these bacteria and their associated genes were also present on the faces of our closest relatives, chimpanzees and gorillas. Our study shows that human facial skin hosts markedly different bacteria than other primates, with C. acnes being uniquely abundant on human faces. This finding suggests that this key bacterial species may have adapted specifically to human skin, which produces more oils than other primates.

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来源期刊
mSystems
mSystems Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Biochemistry
CiteScore
10.50
自引率
3.10%
发文量
308
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: mSystems™ will publish preeminent work that stems from applying technologies for high-throughput analyses to achieve insights into the metabolic and regulatory systems at the scale of both the single cell and microbial communities. The scope of mSystems™ encompasses all important biological and biochemical findings drawn from analyses of large data sets, as well as new computational approaches for deriving these insights. mSystems™ will welcome submissions from researchers who focus on the microbiome, genomics, metagenomics, transcriptomics, metabolomics, proteomics, glycomics, bioinformatics, and computational microbiology. mSystems™ will provide streamlined decisions, while carrying on ASM''s tradition of rigorous peer review.
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