皮肤细菌对人类生命的适应提供了一个潜在的痤疮杆菌感染的生物标志物。

Md Shafiuddin, Wen-Chi Huang, Gabriel William Prather, Jeffrey Ryan Anton, Andrew Lawrence Martin, Sydney Brianna Sillart, Jonathan Z Tang, Michael R Vittori, Michael J Prinsen, Jessica Jane Ninneman, Chandrashekhara Manithody, Jeffrey P Henderson, Alexander W Aleem, Ma Xenia Garcia Ilagan, William H McCoy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

丙酸杆菌科似乎在驯化牛的过程中适应了人类的生活。这些外来的微生物形成了角质杆菌属,这些微生物开拓者的后代(痤疮C.)现在占人类皮肤的25%。C.痤疮在人体皮肤上的定植需要RoxP蛋白。虽然所有Cutibacteria都编码了这种适应人类生活的能力,但在其他任何生物体中都没有发现类似RoxP的基因。在此,我们报告了对21个RoxP同源物的广泛评估,这些同源物确定了与血红素依赖性寡聚化和低pH稳定性相关的保守分子表面。我们的研究揭示了RoxP如何帮助痤疮C.显性皮脂腺皮肤,并确定了与寻常痤疮相关病原体亚种出现相关的同源物。痤疮也是一种新兴的病原体,经常感染关节假体和其他医疗器械。这些感染经常被遗漏,因为没有检测来确认是否有痤疮杆菌感染。为了满足这一临床需求,我们开发了免疫测定法,可以评估通常被痤疮c感染的人类生物体液中的RoxP。这项研究的发现和分析将有助于揭示新石器时代牲畜驯化的后果,皮肤共生生物向病原体的进化,以及如何识别人类“替代部位”的感染。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cutibacterium Adaptation to Life on Humans Provides a Potential C. acnes Infection Biomarker.

Propionibacteriaceae appear to have adapted to life on humans during the domestication of cattle. These microbial immigrants formed the genus Cutibacterium, and a descendent of those microbial trailblazers (C. acnes) now dominates 25% of human skin. C. acnes colonization of human skin requires the protein RoxP. While all Cutibacteria encode this adaptation to life on humans, nothing like RoxP has been found in any other organism. Herein, we report an extensive assessment of twenty-one RoxP orthologs, which identified conserved molecular surfaces linked to heme-dependent oligomerization and low pH stability. Our investigation suggests how RoxP helps C. acnes dominant sebaceous skin, and it identified an ortholog associated with the emergence of an acne vulgaris-associated, pathobiont subspecies. C. acnes is also an emerging pathogen that frequently infects joint prostheses and other medical devices. These infections are often missed, because there is no test to confirm a C. acnes infection. To address this clinical need, we developed immunoassays that can assess RoxP in human biofluids commonly infected by C. acnes. This study's findings and assays will help shed light on the consequences of Neolithic Age livestock domestication, the evolution of skin commensals into pathogens, and how to identify infections of human "replacement parts."

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