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Vaginal and Anal Microbiome during Infections. | LitMetric

Vaginal and Anal Microbiome during Infections.

Pathogens

Microbiology, Department of Experimental, Diagnostic and Specialty Medicine (DIMES), University of Bologna, 40138 Bologna, Italy.

Published: October 2021

(CT) is the agent of the most common bacterial sexually transmitted infection worldwide, with a significant impact on women's health. Despite the increasing number of studies about the vaginal microbiome in women with CT infections, information about the composition of the anal microbiome is still lacking. Here, we assessed the bacterial community profiles of vaginal and anal ecosystems associated or not with CT infection in a cohort of Caucasian young women. A total of 26 women, including 10 with a contemporary vaginal and ano-rectal CT infection, were enrolled. Composition of vaginal and anal microbiome was studied by 16S rRNA gene profiling. Co-occurrence networks of bacterial communities and metagenome metabolic functions were determined. In case of CT infection, both vaginal and anal environments were characterized by a degree of dysbiosis. Indeed, the vaginal microbiome of CT-positive women were depleted in lactobacilli, with a significant increase in dysbiosis-associated bacteria (e.g., ), whereas the anal microbiota of CT-infected women was characterized by higher levels of and and lower levels of . Interestingly, the microbiome of anus and vagina had numerous bacterial taxa in common, reflecting a significant microbial 'sharing' between the two sites. In the vaginal environment, CT positively correlated with spp. while co-occurred with several dysbiosis-related microbes, regardless of CT vaginal infection. The vaginal microbiome of CT-positive females exhibited a higher involvement of chorismate and aromatic amino acid biosynthesis, as well as an increase in mixed acid fermentation. These data could be useful to set up new diagnostic/prognostic tools, offering new perspectives for the control of chlamydial infections.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8539191PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens10101347DOI Listing

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