Abstract
ABSTRACTPerturbations to the vaginal microbiota can lead to dysbiosis, including bacterial vaginosis (BV), which affects a large portion of the female population. In a healthy state, the vaginal microbiota is characterized by low diversity and colonization by Lactobacillus spp., whereas in BV, these species are displaced by a highly diverse population of bacteria associated with adverse vaginal health outcomes. Since prebiotic ingestion has been a highly effective approach to invigorate lactobacilli for improved intestinal health, we hypothesized that these compounds could stimulate lactobacilli at the expense of BV organisms to maintain vaginal health. Monocultures of commensal Lactobacillus crispatus, Lactobacillus vaginalis, Lactobacillus gasseri, Lactobacillus johnsonii, Lactobacillus jensenii, and Lactobacillus iners, in addition to BV-associated organisms and Candida albicans, were tested for their ability to utilize a representative group of prebiotics consisting of lactitol, lactulose, raffinose, and oligofructose. The disaccharide lactulose was found to most broadly and specifically stimulate vaginal lactobacilli, including the strongly health-associated species L. crispatus, and importantly, not to stimulate BV organisms or C. albicans. Using freshly collected vaginal samples, we showed that exposure to lactulose promoted commensal Lactobacillus growth and dominance and resulted in healthy acidity partially through lactic acid production. This provides support for further testing of lactulose to prevent dysbiosis and potentially to reduce the need for antimicrobial agents in managing vaginal health.IMPORTANCE Bacterial vaginosis (BV) and other dysbioses of the vaginal microbiota significantly affect the quality of life of millions of women. Antimicrobial therapy is often poorly effective, causes side effects, and does not prevent recurrences. We report one of very few studies that have evaluated how prebiotics—compounds that are selectively fermented by beneficial bacteria such as Lactobacillus spp.—can modulate the vaginal microbiota. We also report use of a novel in vitro polymicrobial model to study the impact of prebiotics on the vaginal microbiota. The identification of prebiotic lactulose as enhancing Lactobacillus growth but not that of BV organisms or Candida albicans has direct application for retention of homeostasis and prevention of vaginal dysbiosis and infection.
Highlights
Perturbations to the vaginal microbiota can lead to dysbiosis, including bacterial vaginosis (BV), which affects a large portion of the female population
We showed that supplementation of bacterial monocultures with lactulose stimulated L. crispatus, L. gasseri, L. vaginalis, and L. jensenii RC-28, while antagonizing C. albicans and A. vaginae, indicating its ability to selectively propagate a range of commensals but not vaginal pathogens
Lactulose did not improve the viability of L. iners, the drastically lowered medium pH suggests that lactulose was fermented by L. iners to produce acidic metabolites (Fig. 1)
Summary
Perturbations to the vaginal microbiota can lead to dysbiosis, including bacterial vaginosis (BV), which affects a large portion of the female population. Another approach worth considering is the use of a prebiotic, which is defined as a substrate that is selectively used by beneficial host microorganisms to confer a health benefit [19] These are generally food-grade compounds, including inulin and other fructooligosaccharides (FOS), sugar alcohols, galactooligosaccharides (GOS), lactulose, and raffinose. Several prebiotics, including GOS [22, 23], FOS [23, 24], and glucomannan hydrolysates [25, 26], have since been evaluated for their efficacy in stimulating vaginal lactobacilli in both in vitro and small-scale human trials The assessment of these and other formulations, has been based on testing against single strains or on characterizing dysbiosis using combinations of culture- and microscopy-based techniques, which lack the sensitivity needed to detect the numerous low-abundance anaerobes present in BV. Molecular techniques such as 16S rRNA gene sequencing and metabolomics (used in this study) should be adopted to accurately observe modifications to the vaginal microbiota
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