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New Insights Into the Skin Microbial Communities and Skin Aging. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Human skin aging alters the skin microbiota composition, but the specifics of these changes and their effects on aging remain largely unknown.
  • Researchers analyzed microbiomes from skin samples of 80 individuals across different ages, identifying distinct age-related microbial profiles linked to both intrinsic aging and photoaging.
  • The study highlights nine specific microbial communities and 18 pathways that may influence skin aging by regulating the immune response and metabolism, suggesting a potential for targeted microbial therapies to address skin aging.

Article Abstract

Although it is well-known that human skin aging is accompanied by an alteration in the skin microbiota, we know little about how the composition of these changes during the course of aging and the effects of age-related skin microbes on aging. Using 16S ribosomal DNA and internal transcribed spacer ribosomal DNA sequencing to profile the microbiomes of 160 skin samples from two anatomical sites, the cheek and the abdomen, on 80 individuals of varying ages, we developed age-related microbiota profiles for both intrinsic skin aging and photoaging to provide an improved understanding of the age-dependent variation in skin microbial composition. According to the landscape, the microbial composition in the Children group was significantly different from that in the other age groups. Further correlation analysis with clinical parameters and functional prediction in each group revealed that high enrichment of nine microbial communities (i.e., , , , , , , , and ) and 18 pathways (such as ) potentially affected skin aging, implying that skin microbiomes may perform key functions in skin aging by regulating the immune response, resistance to ultraviolet light, and biosynthesis and metabolism of age-related substances. Our work re-establishes that skin microbiomes play an important regulatory role in the aging process and opens a new approach for targeted microbial therapy for skin aging.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7649423PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.565549DOI Listing

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