Abstract

BackgroundSkin, the largest organ of the human body by weight, hosts a diversity of microorganisms that can influence health. The microbial residents of the skin are now appreciated for their roles in host immune interactions, wound healing, colonization resistance, and various skin disorders. Still, much remains to be discovered in terms of the host pathways influenced by skin microorganisms, as well as the higher-level skin properties impacted through these microbe-host interactions. Towards this direction, recent efforts using mouse models point to pronounced changes in the transcriptional profiles of the skin in response to the presence of a microbial community. However, there is a need to quantify the roles of microorganisms at both the individual and community-level in healthy human skin. In this study, we utilize human skin equivalents to study the effects of individual taxa and a microbial community in a precisely controlled context. Through transcriptomics analysis, we identify key genes and pathways influenced by skin microbes, and we also characterize higher-level impacts on skin processes and properties through histological analyses.ResultsThe presence of a microbiome on a 3D skin tissue model led to significantly altered patterns of gene expression, influencing genes involved in the regulation of apoptosis, proliferation, and the extracellular matrix (among others). Moreover, microbiome treatment influenced the thickness of the epidermal layer, reduced the number of actively proliferating cells, and increased filaggrin expression. Many of these findings were evident upon treatment with the mixed community, but either not detected or less pronounced in treatments by single microorganisms, underscoring the impact that a diverse skin microbiome has on the host.ConclusionsThis work contributes to the understanding of how microbiome constituents individually and collectively influence human skin processes and properties. The results show that, while it is important to understand the effect of individual microbes on the host, a full community of microbes has unique and pronounced effects on the skin. Thus, in its impacts on the host, the skin microbiome is more than the sum of its parts.F6Ez83UF8Q6ptotXK-unhhVideo abstract.

Highlights

  • Skin, the largest organ of the human body by weight, hosts a diversity of microorganisms that can influence health

  • We studied microbiome representatives from species and genera that commonly reside in the aerobic environments of the skin surface—Staphylococcus epidermidis, Streptococcus luteciae, Bacillus sp., Roseomonas mucosa, Paenibacillus sp., Micrococcus luteus, Corynebacterium sp., and Acinetobacter lwoffi [5]

  • Microbiome representatives alter skin tissue gene expression To examine the impact of individual microorganisms on the skin tissue processes, model microbiome treatments were co-cultured at the air-tissue interface of EpiDerm skin tissue equivalents

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The largest organ of the human body by weight, hosts a diversity of microorganisms that can influence health. The composition of particular taxa varies widely across body sites Areas such as the antecubital fossa (inner elbow) or the axillary vault (underarm) are classified as moist regions and are associated with a high abundance of Staphylococcus and Corynebacterium [4]. One study found that over half of the bacterial genera at dry sites can be attributed to either Cutibacterium (recently renamed from Propionibacterium [8]), Corynebacteria, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, or Acinetobacter species [4, 9] Sebaceous areas, such as the forehead or alar crease (side of the nostril) harbor Cutibacterium, which primarily resides within sebaceous glands [4]. These studies have shown that Cutibacterium, Staphylococcus, Micrococcus, Bacillus, Roseomonas, and Paenibacillus are prevalent and viable on the skin microbiome [10]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call