Abstract

Human skin and hair follicles are recognized sites of microbial colonization. These microbiota help regulate host immune mechanisms via an interplay between microbes and immune cells, influencing homeostasis and inflammation. Bacteria affect immune responses by controlling the local inflammatory milieu, the breakdown of which can result in chronic inflammatory disorders. Follicular microbiome shifts described in some inflammatory cutaneous diseases suggest a link between their development or perpetuation and dysbiosis. Though the hair follicle infundibulum is an area of intense immunological interactions, bulb and bulge regions represent immune-privileged niches. Immune privilege maintenance seems essential for hair growth and regeneration, as collapse and inflammation characterize inflammatory hair disorders like alopecia areata and primary cicatricial alopecia. Current research largely focuses on immunological aberrations. However, studies suggest that external stimuli and interactions across the follicular epithelium can have profound effects on the local immune system, homeostasis, and cycling. Herein, we review hair follicle bacterial colonization, its possible effects on the underlying tissue, and links to the pathogenesis of alopecia, beyond the pure investigation of specific species abundance. As skin microbiology enters the metagenomics era, multi-dimensional approaches will enable a new level of investigations on the effects of microorganisms and metabolism on host tissue.

Highlights

  • The surface of human skin is a site of microbial colonization [1,2]

  • While the role of bacteria as disease-aggravating factors has been recognized for hair follicle (HF)-associated inflammatory diseases such as acne vulgaris or folliculitis decalvans [12,14,15], only scarce information is available on how changes in the follicular microbial communities can affect HF immunology, cycling, and regeneration

  • There is increasing proof of the presence of bacteria reaching below the skin surface and along the HFs [10,11,16], and rising evidence is emerging that the cross-talk between bacteria and the underlying tissue is a dynamic reciprocal process [17,18]

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Summary

Introduction

The surface of human skin is a site of microbial colonization [1,2]. The commensal flora of the skin maintain a symbiotic relationship and shape the cutaneous immunity of the host [3,4]. Several studies have characterized the cutaneous bacterial communities of healthy individuals and patients with inflammatory diseases, mostly in material collected using swabs [5,6,7,8,9]. Such sampling from hair follicle (HF) openings, is especially challenging. Along their epithelium, HFs harbor a multitude of microorganisms able to reach deeper compartments [10], frequently organized in biofilms [11,12].

Bacterial and Host Crosstalk
Hair Follicle Immune Privilege and Disease
Could External Factors Negatively Impact IP Maintenance?
What Do We Know about Bacteria in HF-Associated Disorders and Hair Diseases?
A New Era of Microbiome Analyses
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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