人类泌尿组。

L Brubaker, C Putonti, Q Dong, A J Wolfe
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引用次数: 10

摘要

传统上,健康的膀胱被认为是无菌的。几个团队已经使用宏基因组学(依赖dna)和元培养学(依赖培养)的方法来揭穿这个长期存在的教条。事实上,在成年女性和男性中都检测到常驻微生物群落(尿组)。虽然这个领域还很年轻,但已经进行了一些观察。例如,男性和女性的泌尿组不同,可能是由于解剖学和激素的差异。重要的是,泌尿组与多种下尿路疾病有关,包括膀胱过度活动和术后尿路感染,这提高了临床医生有可能通过修改泌尿组而不是杀死可疑的泌尿病原体来治疗症状的可能性。关于尿组与宿主遗传之间的关系,我们知之甚少;到目前为止,只有一篇论文报道了这样的研究。然而,主要的努力已经进入了解尿组本身的基因组学,这一过程促进了许多尿组研究使用元培养方法来检测和鉴定微生物。在这篇叙述性综述中,我们将分别介绍男性和女性泌尿组,讨论泌尿组特有的挑战,描述新发现的泌尿组与下尿路症状之间的联系,并强调一项试图将宿主遗传与泌尿组联系起来的研究。我们将以一节关于细菌分离物的宏基因组调查和全基因组测序如何提高我们对尿组及其与下尿路健康和疾病的关系的理解来结束。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The human urobiome.

Traditionally, the healthy urinary bladder has been considered to be sterile. Several teams have used metagenomic (DNA-dependent) and metaculturomic (culture-dependent) methods to debunk this longstanding dogma. In fact, resident microbial communities (urobiome) have been detected in both adult females and males. Although the field is young, several observations have been made. For example, the urobiome differs between men and women, likely due to anatomical and hormonal differences. Importantly, the urobiome has been associated with a variety of lower urinary tract disorders, including overactive bladder and post-operative urinary tract infection, raising the possibility that clinicians might one day treat symptoms by modifying the urobiome instead of killing the suspected uropathogen. Little is known concerning the relationship between the urobiome and host genetics; so far, only a single paper has reported such a study. However, major efforts have gone into understanding the genomics of the urobiome itself, a process facilitated by the fact that many urobiome studies have used metaculturomic methods to detect and identify microbes. In this narrative review, we will introduce the urobiome with separate sections on the female and male urobiomes, discuss challenges specific to the urobiome, describe newly discovered associations between the urobiome and lower urinary tract symptoms, and highlight the one study that has attempted to relate host genetics and the urobiome. We will finish with a section on how metagenomic surveys and whole genome sequencing of bacterial isolates are improving our understanding of the urobiome and its relationship to lower urinary tract health and disorders.

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