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Bibliography on: Microbiome

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ESP: PubMed Auto Bibliography 13 Oct 2025 at 01:49 Created: 

Microbiome

It has long been known that every multicellular organism coexists with large prokaryotic ecosystems — microbiomes — that completely cover its surfaces, external and internal. Recent studies have shown that these associated microbiomes are not mere contamination, but instead have profound effects upon the function and fitness of the multicellular organism. We now know that all MCEs are actually functional composites, holobionts, composed of more prokaryotic cells than eukaryotic cells and expressing more prokaryotic genes than eukaryotic genes. A full understanding of the biology of "individual" eukaryotes will now depend on an understanding of their associated microbiomes.

Created with PubMed® Query: microbiome[tiab] NOT pmcbook NOT ispreviousversion

Citations The Papers (from PubMed®)

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RevDate: 2025-10-12
CmpDate: 2025-10-12

Dalal SR (2025)

The Microbiome and Inflammatory Bowel Diseases.

The Surgical clinics of North America, 105(5):941-951.

Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD) are associated with a less diverse, dysbiotic intestinal microbiome that leads to alterations in immune modifying microbial metabolites. Genetic and environmental risk factors for IBD likely exert their effects through alterations of the microbiome. Transfer of synthetic microbial communities and targeted dietary interventions hold some promise in altering underlying causes of IBD.

RevDate: 2025-10-12
CmpDate: 2025-10-12

Galbraith NJ, MG White (2025)

Microbiome of Young and Later-Onset Colorectal Cancer.

The Surgical clinics of North America, 105(5):925-939.

Young-onset colorectal cancer (YOCRC) is increasingly common in the Western world. This has been attributed to changes in diet, lifestyle, and other environmental factors which all influence the gut microbiome. This review summarizes a small number of studies that have demonstrated differences in the microbiome of YOCRC, assessed in the stool and tumoral compartment. These populations are distinct from LOCRC and are prognostically important. Further research may reveal their role in the pathogenesis of this epidemic, and microbiological interventions can alter or augment existing treatment responses.

RevDate: 2025-10-12
CmpDate: 2025-10-12

Portolese AC, NA Jeganathan (2025)

The Microbiome and the Etiology of Diverticulitis.

The Surgical clinics of North America, 105(5):913-924.

This article provides a review of the existing literature on the microbiome and metabolome of diverticulosis and diverticular disease. Existing studies indicate the microbiome is less likely a cause in the development of diverticulosis. Current evidence highlighting likely etiologic microbes and metabolites in the pathogenesis of diverticular disease is presented. As most data at this time is descriptive and lacks rigorous testing in an animal model of diverticular disease, these findings are extrapolated from the existing understanding of the microbiome in inflammatory bowel disease.

RevDate: 2025-10-12
CmpDate: 2025-10-12

Fair L, MA Ward (2025)

The Gut Microbiome and Bariatric Surgery.

The Surgical clinics of North America, 105(5):903-912.

Obesity is a complex, multifactorial disease that is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Recent research in bariatric surgery has shown that these surgeries can impact the composition of the gut microbiome. Postoperative alterations include increased microbial diversity and shifts in composition, such as a change in the Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio. The interplay between altered gut anatomy, dietary changes, and microbiome composition creates a metabolically favorable environment that contributes to the long-term success of bariatric surgery. This review focuses on the overall impact of bariatric surgery on the gut microbiome and potential targeted therapies that can be used to improve outcomes.

RevDate: 2025-10-12
CmpDate: 2025-10-12

Awad D, D Daley (2025)

The Role of the Microbiome in Pancreas Cancer: The Evolving Influence of the Fungal Mycobiome.

The Surgical clinics of North America, 105(5):887-902.

The gut microbiome has been shown to impact the progression of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma and the tumor's response to therapy. Microbial dysbiosis or changes in the healthy gut microbiome has been implicated in pancreatic cancer patients and influences immune cell differentiation and cancer cell behavior in the tumor microenvironment. This article summarizes the key findings from studies investigating interactions between gut microbes and components of the tumor microenvironment, with a special focus on the oncogenic effects of the fungal mycobiome.

RevDate: 2025-10-12
CmpDate: 2025-10-12

Ho KJ, Vs J, Abualhuda A, et al (2025)

How the Microbiome Drives Cardiovascular Disease.

The Surgical clinics of North America, 105(5):871-885.

Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the leading causes of death and disability globally. Scientific and clinical evidence demonstrate that gut microbiota influence the development and natural history of CVDs through regulation of the immune/inflammatory response, intestinal barrier function, and metabolic pathways. This article provides an overview of the relationships between gut dysbiosis and coronary artery disease, heart failure, cardiovascular death, cerebrovascular disease, peripheral artery disease, and aortic aneurysms and how these relationships may lead to novel interventions for disease prevention and treatment.

RevDate: 2025-10-12
CmpDate: 2025-10-12

Polster SP (2025)

The Role of the Microbiome and the Neurovascular Unit.

The Surgical clinics of North America, 105(5):857-869.

The gut-brain axis plays a crucial role in neurovascular diseases, linking gut microbiota to blood-brain barrier integrity, neuroinflammation, and disease progression. Conditions such as cerebral cavernous malformations, traumatic brain injury, radiation-induced damage, and stroke exhibit microbiome-driven modulation that may be relevant to explain disease variance. Microbial metabolites have been shown to influence endothelial function and secondary brain injury mechanisms. Emerging interventions of dietary modifications, probiotics, fecal microbiota transplantation, and metabolite-based therapies show promise in mitigating neurovascular damage. Future research should focus on microbiome-targeted treatments, biomarker discovery, and personalized strategies to optimize neurovascular health through gut microbiome modulation.

RevDate: 2025-10-12

Napier EG, Doratt BM, Cinco IR, et al (2025)

Age-related severity of nontuberculous mycobacterial lung disease is mediated by aberrant macrophage responses and lung microbial dysbiosis.

The Journal of infection pii:S0163-4453(25)00226-9 [Epub ahead of print].

OBJECTIVES: Although cases of nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) pulmonary disease (NTMPD) are rapidly increasing primarily in individuals over the age of 65, the host factors leading to higher occurrence in immunocompetent older patients remain elusive. This study aims to elucidate host factors leading to higher nontuberculous mycobacterial pulmonary disease occurrence in older immunocompetent patients.

METHODS: To address these challenges, we used a rhesus macaque model developed by our laboratory where macaques were infected via intrabronchial inoculation with M. avium subsp. hominissuis (MAH). Disease progression, bacterial load, microbial community compositions, and host responses were monitored longitudinally using computed tomography, culturing, 16S amplicon sequencing, histology, flow cytometry, and single cell RNA sequencing.

RESULTS: Despite comparable kinetics of bacterial clearance, computed tomography scans indicated more severe radiological outcomes in older animals which mounted predominantly an inflammatory acute phase response rather than a Th1 response. Single cell RNA sequencing indicated a persistent inflammatory signature in aged animals. Microbial community analysis revealed an age-mediated loss of an uncultured Tropheryma species that was inversely correlated with severity of radiographic changes.

CONCLUSIONS: These data reveal that nontuberculous mycobacterial pulmonary disease severity in the aged animals is driven by dysregulated inflammatory responses and dysbiosis of the lung microbiome.

RevDate: 2025-10-12

Agrawal K, Hong ASY, Cifuentes-González C, et al (2025)

Microbiome Signatures and Their Role in Uveitis: Pathogenesis, Diagnostics, and Therapeutic Perspectives.

Progress in retinal and eye research pii:S1350-9462(25)00082-5 [Epub ahead of print].

Non-infectious uveitis is a group of complex inflammatory eye diseases shaped by genetic susceptibility, immune dysregulation, and environmental cues. Among these, the mucosal microbiome-including gut, oral, and ocular surface microbial communities-has emerged as a key player in modulating systemic and ocular immune responses. Recent evidence supports a gut-eye axis wherein microbial dysbiosis alters intestinal barrier function, perturbs T cell homeostasis, and drives systemic immune activation that can breach ocular immune privilege. Specific taxa, such as Prevotella and Faecalibacterium, as well as microbial metabolites including short-chain fatty acids, have been implicated in promoting or mitigating ocular inflammation. Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles, notably HLA-B27 and HLA-A29, influence both microbiome composition and disease phenotype, suggesting a gene-microbiome-immunity triad of interaction in uveitis pathogenesis. Drawing on insights from metagenomics, metabolomics, in vitro and in vivo experimental and murine models, this review delineates four key mechanisms-immune imbalance, antigenic mimicry, epithelial barrier disruption, and bacterial translocation-that underpin the key roles of microbiome in uveitis. We combine current literature and integrate findings from our research programs to highlight diagnostic and therapeutic opportunities. Microbiome-informed strategies, such as rational probiotic design, dietary modulation, and targeted microbial therapies, hold promise for complementing existing immunosuppressive regimens. Translating these insights into clinical practice requires robust multi-omic studies, longitudinal cohorts, mechanistic studies, and precision-guided intervention trials. By framing uveitis within a mucosal immunological context, this review proposes a future precision medicine roadmap for integrating microbiome science into ocular inflammatory disease management.

RevDate: 2025-10-12

Wheatley RM, Holtappels D, B Koskella (2025)

Evaluation of bacteriophages as a signature of microbiome health: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

The Lancet. Microbe pii:S2666-5247(25)00124-7 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Parasites are foundational to ecosystem health both as indicator species of community productivity and as drivers of diversity. In bacterial communities, bacteriophage viruses can have such roles as they track and modulate the dynamic composition of bacterial hosts within an ecosystem. We aimed to test whether viromes can be used as broad signatures of microbiome health using previously published results across systems.

METHODS: In this systematic review and meta-analysis, we searched PubMed, Google Scholar, Scopus, and Web of Science from Jan 22, 2022, to Sept 17, 2024, for peer-reviewed, primary literature published in English, using search terms "phage diversity", "microbiome", "virome", "virus", "phageome", "disease", and "dysbiosis". Inclusion criteria were: a comparison between a dysbiosis state and a healthy state in a human or animal host; a defined host organism and microbiome site; examination of the virome; an obtained measure of virome diversity (α, β, or both); use of statistical analysis to assess whether α or β diversity are changed in dysbiosis; and sufficient methodology description on viral isolation and on virus sequence analysis pipeline. We conducted a qualitative data analysis to assess factors explaining changes to virome diversity in dysbiosis. We then calculated response ratios for each study to test for overall patterns of virome α diversity change under disturbance. Finally, we conducted a quantitative analysis on studies from which we were able to obtain paired virome and bacteriome α diversity data to examine the correlation between these data in defined health compared with defined disturbance conditions. This study was not registered.

FINDINGS: We identified a total of 74 studies for inclusion that spanned human (n=61), mouse (n=8), pig (n=3), dog (n=1), and cow (n=1) hosts and a diverse spectrum of infections and diseases. By comparing observed phage and bacterial diversity in microbiomes characterised by dysbiosis with those considered control populations, we were able to identify some key commonalities. Of the 69 studies that investigated changes to α diversity of the virome in dysbiosis, 28 (41%) reported significant changes, but with variable directional change. Of 38 datasets (from 30 studies) for which virome α diversity values were available, 22 (58%) gave a response ratio of less than 1 (α diversity decreases in dysbiosis) and 16 (42%) of more than 1 (α diversity increases in dysbiosis); however, in 27 (71%) datasets, 95% CIs overlapped with 1 (ie, no change in α diversity). We found shifting virome composition to be a more consistent signature of dysbiosis, with 47 (69%) of 68 studies reporting a significant change in viral β diversity with dysbiosis. 62 (89%) of 70 studies reported significant enrichment of system-specific viral taxa under dysbiosis. Our quantitative correlation analysis suggested that bacterial α diversity is a greater predictor of virome α diversity in healthy groups (mean r[2]=0·380; 95% CI 0·597-0·163) than in dysbiosis (mean r[2]=0·118, 0·223-0·012; sign test for asymmetric non-parametric data p=4·9 × 10[-10]).

INTERPRETATION: Overall, although specific viral signatures of dysbiosis are likely to be highly disease-specific and condition-specific, we show that existing ecological theory shows promise in predicting the relationship between bacterial and phage diversity and in providing broad signatures of dysbiosis across disease systems. Our observation that the relationship between bacterial and phage diversity breaks down under disturbance suggests that this feature could be a useful signature of dysbiosis and that future studies incorporating the virome could provide opportunity to diagnose, treat, and better understand the causes of microbiome disturbance.

FUNDING: There was no funding source for this study.

RevDate: 2025-10-12

Shi W, Xi M, Zhang K, et al (2025)

Gut microbiota as a central mediator in hydrogen gas-induced alleviation of colitis via TLR4/NF-κB and Nrf2 pathway regulation.

International immunopharmacology, 167:115671 pii:S1567-5769(25)01662-5 [Epub ahead of print].

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic and relapsing autoimmune disorder of the gastrointestinal tract with incompletely elucidated pathogenesis and limited therapeutic options. Although hydrogen gas (H2) has demonstrated therapeutic efficacy in various diseases including IBD, its mechanisms of action, particularly its interaction with the gut microbiota, remain poorly characterized. This study reveals that H2 inhalation effectively reversed dextran sulfate sodium (DSS)-induced dysbiosis by suppressing the expansion of potential pathogenic bacteria (e.g., Enterobacteriaceae and Escherichia-Shigella) and promoting potential beneficial microbes (e.g., Bacteroides and Lactobacillaceae), thereby restoring microbial homeostasis. Furthermore, H2 inhalation enhanced goblet cell density and mucus production, upregulated tight junction proteins (ZO-1 and occludin), and repaired intestinal barrier integrity. It also rebalanced the Treg/Th17 cell ratio, correcting immune dysregulation. At the molecular level, H2 inhalation suppressed the TLR4/NF-κB signaling pathway and activated the Keap1/Nrf2 antioxidant axis, leading to reduced production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and oxidative stress markers, alongside elevated antioxidant enzymes, collectively ameliorating colonic injury. In brief, the ameliorative effects of H2 are likely mediated through remodeling of the gut microbiota, restoration of the epithelial barrier, suppression of inflammatory signaling, and activation of antioxidant pathways. These findings were further validated by fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) experiments. Collectively, this study links the therapeutic effects of H2 to structural and functional reprogramming of the gut microbiome, indicating that microbial ecological restoration is a central mechanism through which H2 alleviates colitis, thereby providing a mechanistic foundation for the therapeutic application of H2 inhalation in IBD.

RevDate: 2025-10-12

Al-Subhi T, Yasir M, Badreddine SA, et al (2025)

Alteration of bacterial community composition with respiratory infection and linkage of taxa with bacterial pathogens in Saudi Arabia from the Arabian Peninsula.

Journal of infection and public health, 18(12):102986 pii:S1876-0341(25)00335-1 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: The microbiome of the respiratory system functions as a gatekeeper of respiratory health and is influenced by respiratory diseases. The aim of this study was to identify changes in the respiratory bacterial community composition associated with respiratory infections and to explore their relationship with specific bacterial pathogens in the Saudi Arabian population.

METHODS: Nasopharyngeal samples were screened from 73 individuals, including 34 symptomatic respiratory tract infection patients, 10 asymptomatic participants, and 29 healthy controls. Respiratory pathogens were detected using real-time PCR, and the microbiota were characterized through 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing.

RESULTS: Alpha diversity analysis revealed a slight decrease in bacterial richness in patients and asymptomatic individuals compared to healthy controls. In beta diversity analysis, healthy controls clustered together, while most symptomatic patients clustered separately. Actinobacteria, known for maintaining microbial homeostasis and preventing pathogenic colonization, were abundant in asymptomatic and healthy controls (> 30 %) but were substantially reduced to < 20 % relative abundance in symptomatic patients. Several bacterial genera, including Abiotrophia, Capnocytophaga, Megasphaera, Campylobacter, Peptostreptococcus, Veillonella, Streptococcus, and Bulleidia, were positively correlated with respiratory infections. Corynebacterium, Dolosigranulum, and Lawsonella were more abundantly found in healthy and asymptomatic individuals. Patients harboring Streptococcus pneumoniae or methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) exhibited distinct bacterial profiles. Genera such as Staphylococcus, Pseudomonas, and Peptoniphilus were correlated with MRSA infection, while samples positive for S. pneumoniae exhibited a relatively higher abundance of Neisseria and Prevotella. Notably, a substantial number of symptomatic patients tested negative for any of the screened pathogens by real-time PCR but still showed alterations in bacterial community composition.

CONCLUSIONS: Specific bacterial taxa showed significant differences between healthy controls and symptomatically infected patients, suggesting that bacterial community structures and groups of taxa, rather than individual bacterial taxa, may play a role in regulating respiratory infections.

RevDate: 2025-10-12

Hull MA, H Sun (2025)

Omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids and gut microbiota.

Current opinion in clinical nutrition and metabolic care [Epub ahead of print].

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Oral intake of n (omega)-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) is associated with changes to gut microbiota. We review recent findings from 2024 onwards, which build the scientific case that changes to bacterial abundance, and their metabolites, contribute to the health benefits associated with n-3 PUFAs.

RECENT FINDINGS: There are now multiple studies in rodent disease models that demonstrate that n-3 PUFAs do not significantly alter bacterial diversity but, instead, alter abundance of several species that are implicated in short-chain fatty acid synthesis, in a model-specific manner. Limited intervention studies in humans, backed by larger observational studies, concur with the preclinical findings. Importantly, faecal transplantation experiments have confirmed that n-3 PUFA-induced changes to gut microbiota are causally related to reversal of the disease phenotype in two rodent models. In-vitro colonic models are now being used to understand the mechanism(s) underlying n-3 PUFA-induced changes to the gut microbiota and metabolome.

SUMMARY: Despite emerging proof that the gut microbiota contributes to n-3 PUFA activity in animal models, human data are sparse. It remains unclear how n-3 PUFAs affect changes to the gut microbiota or whether n-3 PUFA metabolism by gut microbes contributes to the host metabolome.

RevDate: 2025-10-12

Burdon IA, AJ Psaltis (2025)

Changes in the sinus microbiome in health and chronic rhinosinusitis.

Current opinion in otolaryngology & head and neck surgery [Epub ahead of print].

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This article synthesises the recent sinus microbiome literature, identifying common themes in research findings as well as surveying the varied methodological approaches used across these studies.

RECENT FINDINGS: While there remains no clear consensus as to which microbes define dysbiosis in chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS), certain trends are emerging. Increasingly, the evidence points towards a pathogenic role in the overabundance of Moraxella, Haemophilus and Pseudomonas species, whilst the genera Cutibacterium, Anaerococcus and Dolosigranulum tend towards commensalism. However, the roles of the most common genera in the sinus microbiome, Staphylococcus and Corynebacterium, remain uncertain. Given the diversity and abundance of species within these genera, species and function-level analyses are needed to clarify their contributions to the aetiopathogenesis of CRS. Comprehensive study of the sinus microbiome in healthy individuals further shows that community composition shifts with age, suggesting that dysbiosis may manifest differently across the lifespan. Beyond bacteria, growing evidence highlights the importance of fungi and viruses, underscoring the need to incorporate these microbionts into future analyses.

SUMMARY: Progress towards a clinically meaningful consensus will require standardised approaches to sequencing, species-level resolution in these analyses, and consideration of the heterogeneous clinical and immunological subgroups of CRS.

RevDate: 2025-10-11
CmpDate: 2025-10-11

Tseng CH, CY Wu (2025)

From dysbiosis to longevity: a narrative review into the gut microbiome's impact on aging.

Journal of biomedical science, 32(1):93.

Aging has become an important public health concern with the accelerated aging of the global population. The rising impetus to extend lifespan as well as healthspan has drawn attention to the gut microbiome, an indispensable yet modifiable determinant of the aging process. This narrative review addresses the complex interaction between the gut microbiome and aging, synthesizing findings in logical order. Evidence from model organisms supports the causal influence of gut microbes on host aging and longevity. Developmental evolution of the human gut microbiome throughout life stages reflects its adaptive nature affected by diet, lifestyle, hormone levels, and immune function, regulating aging through the gut-muscle and the gut-brain axes in late life. Signature characteristics of the long-lived gut microbiome, including increased diversity, elevated beneficial taxa, and enhanced gut homeostasis, lead to strategies to extend longevity. Intake of fiber, regular exercise, and pro-/pre-/postbiotic supplements are potential interventions on the gut microbiome to foster vitality in later years. Centering on these connected topics, this review identifies questions warranting investigation, with potential to improve therapeutic strategies for healthy aging.

RevDate: 2025-10-11

Salah AN, Doghish YA, Abbass SO, et al (2025)

Microbiota-based therapies in oral health and disorders.

Folia microbiologica [Epub ahead of print].

The human oral microbiome is a complex, dynamic ecosystem critically involved in maintaining oral health and contributing to systemic well-being. Many bacteria and fungi are involved in oral cavities such as Penicillium, Rhodotorula, Saccharomycetales, Streptococcus, Veillonella, Neisseria, Actinomyces, and Schizophyllum. Disruption of microbial homeostasis, or dysbiosis, underpins a wide spectrum of oral diseases, including dental caries, periodontal disease, endodontic infections, and mucosal conditions. Recent advances in microbiome research have elucidated the mechanisms by which pathogenic microbial consortia, such as the red complex (Porphyromonas gingivalis, Tannerella. forsythia, and Treponema denticola), synergistically promote disease progression through virulence factors, metabolic interactions, and biofilm formation. Emerging microbiome-based therapies, comprising probiotics, postbiotics, predatory bacteria, and using bacteriophages, offer promising adjuncts or alternatives to traditional antimicrobial approaches by restoring microbial balance, reducing pathogenic load, and modulating host immune responses. For instance, probiotic strains like Streptococcus salivarius and Lactobacillus spp. have demonstrated efficacy in reducing plaque, gingival inflammation, and pathogenic bacteria, as well as having significant immunological modulation, while postbiotics provide similar benefits with enhanced safety and stability. Additionally, predatory bacteria such as Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus show potential for selective bacterial elimination and combating periodontal diseases that are driven by Gram-negative anaerobes. Bacteriophages offer another precision tool for targeting oral pathogens by lysing bacteria upon replication. Finally, oral microbiota transplantation aimed at treating periodontal disease by restoring a balanced microbial community in the oral cavity. These innovative strategies, combined with a nuanced understanding of biofilm dynamics and host-microbe interactions, pave the way for personalized and ecologically sustainable oral health interventions. Continued research is essential to translate these promising approaches into clinical practice, optimize delivery systems, and elucidate long-term safety and efficacy.

RevDate: 2025-10-11

Ayyamuthu Rajarathinam Uma P, Rathinasamy PD, Thanakkan R, et al (2025)

Pink powerhouses: insights into the multifaceted role of Methylobacterium in climate-resilient farming.

Folia microbiologica [Epub ahead of print].

The plant microbiomes consist of a myriad of microorganisms that inhabit and interact with plant tissues and play pivotal roles in improving crop productivity and sustainability. These microbiomes constitute bacteria, fungi, archaea and viruses that have coevolved and supported plants inhabiting the Earth for millions of years. Among these, bacterial members play major functional roles in fostering plant growth and are regarded as plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB). One of the major bacterial genera of the plant microbiome that colonizes the entire plant system is the genus Methylobacterium. The genus Methylobacterium is categorized as a member of the class Alphaproteobacteria and is distinguished by its pink pigmentation, which is a result of the synthesis of carotenoids, mainly xanthophiles. Members of the Methylobacterium genus are commonly known as pink-pigmented facultative methylotrophs, which are ubiquitous in nature and have gained significant importance in crop production in various agricultural ecosystems because of their versatile ability to promote plant growth and enhance stress tolerance. They have the unique ability to utilize single-carbon compounds that are released during plant cell metabolism, improve plant growth, siderophore and phytohormone (auxin and cytokinin) production, and nitrogen fixation; phosphorous and zinc solubilization and induced systemic resistance against phytopathogens; protective biofilm formation; and the production of 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate deaminase to increase stress tolerance and carotenoid production for UV stress tolerance. Owing to its use as a biostimulant, biofertilizer and biocontrol agent, Methylobacterium has potential applications in agriculture for increasing soil health, crop productivity and environmental sustainability. This review provides broad perspectives on the multifaceted role and sustainable application of Methylobacterium in climate-smart agriculture.

RevDate: 2025-10-11

Van De Grift D, Kim E, Yang SM, et al (2025)

Investigation of seasonal microbiome changes in raw milk between conventional and organic farming practices.

Journal of dairy science pii:S0022-0302(25)00805-7 [Epub ahead of print].

Raw milk microbiota is influenced by farming practices, environmental exposure, and seasonal changes. This study investigated how organic and conventional dairy farming practices influence the microbial composition of raw milk over a 1-yr period. Milk and environmental samples were collected quarterly from 7 dairy farms (4 organic and 3 conventional) in Oregon and analyzed using microbiome sequencing. Across all seasons, the microbial community of raw milk was largely similar between organic and conventional farms, with Escherichia-Shigella being the most abundant genus. Aerobic plate counts were significantly higher in conventional raw milk during winter and summer. Organic milk showed greater seasonal variation in α diversity (Shannon index 1.81 ± 0.40 in winter to 1.01 ± 0.34 in fall), whereas conventional milk remained more stable. No significant β diversity differences were observed between farming types. Shared microbial taxa between raw milk and environmental sources varied by season and farming type, reflecting the influence of confinement and grazing. For example, Romboutsia was more abundant during grazing seasons in organic farms, whereas Clostridium sensu stricto 1 appeared uniquely in conventional milk in winter. These seasonal and housing-related trends highlight how farm management shapes milk microbiota.

RevDate: 2025-10-11

Karisola P, H Alenius (2025)

Environmental determinants of immune tolerance in asthma and allergy.

Immunology letters pii:S0165-2478(25)00135-X [Epub ahead of print].

Prevalence of allergic diseases has increased globally, reflecting environmental and behavioral changes. The exposome concept encompasses cumulative chemical, microbial, nutritional, psychosocial, and physical exposures across the life course, offering a unifying framework to understand how immune tolerance is shaped or disrupted. Emerging evidence highlights that early-life exposures are particularly critical. Pollutants, endocrine disruptors, microbial deprivation, dietary shifts, and psychosocial stress contribute to barrier dysfunction, dysbiosis, and immune dysregulation, favoring Th2 dominance and allergy development. In contrast, exposures that enhance biodiversity, microbial diversity, pollution-free air, and balanced nutrition support active tolerance development, especially via regulatory T cells. Mechanistic insights point to the barrier-microbiota-immune axis as central pathways linking the environment to allergic outcomes. Translational studies, including biodiversity enrichment interventions, maternal and infant dietary strategies, and microbiome-based therapies, illustrate the potential of exposome-informed approaches to allergy prevention. However, major challenges remain in measuring complex exposure mixtures, identifying causal pathways, and integrating exposome data with systems immunology. This review synthesizes current knowledge on how the exposome modulates immune tolerance and outlines future research directions toward precision prevention. A deeper understanding of these interactions is essential to address the rising global allergy burden.

RevDate: 2025-10-11

Da Silva NDG, Santos PSDS, Henrique-Silva F, et al (2025)

A novel artificial saliva enriched with CaneCPI-5 for irradiated head and neck cancer (HNC) patients: in vitro antimicrobial and anticaries effect.

Journal of dentistry pii:S0300-5712(25)00622-0 [Epub ahead of print].

OBJECTIVES: This study assessed the antimicrobial and anticaries potential of artificial saliva formulations containing CaneCPI-5, either alone or combined with fluoride and xylitol, designed for irradiated head and neck cancer (HNC) patients with hyposalivation. The impact of the combined formulation on microbial composition was also evaluated.

METHODS: Saliva from five irradiated HNC patients was mixed with McBain medium to form biofilms on irradiated bovine enamel specimens (70 Gy; n = 168). Treatments were applied for 1 minute before biofilm formation and then once daily for 5 days: artificial saliva (AS) base with 0.1% hydroxyethyl cellulose, 0.1% sodium benzoate, and 0.3% mint flavor, either alone, with 0.1 mg/mL CaneCPI-5 (AS+Cane), or with 0.1 mg/mL CaneCPI-5, 1500 ppm fluoride, and 10% xylitol (AS+Cane+F+Xyl, ASF). Controls included PBS (negative), 0.12% chlorhexidine (CHX, positive), and BioXtra® (BXT, commercial). Biofilm metabolic activity, bacterial viability, CFU counts, enamel demineralization, and microbial community composition were assessed.

RESULTS: AS+Cane+F+Xyl significantly reduced live biovolume, CFU counts, and mineral loss (ΔZ and RΔZ) compared with PBS (p < 0.001), with efficacy comparable or superior to BXT and CHX. AS+Cane also showed significant effects but with lower efficacy. ASF preserved overall microbial diversity while selectively enriching ASVs annotated as Streptococcus parasanguinis.

CONCLUSIONS: CaneCPI-5 formulations, particularly combined with fluoride and xylitol, exhibit considerable antimicrobial and enamel-protective effects while maintaining microbial diversity in this in vitro model.

CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Cost-effective artificial saliva enriched with CaneCPI-5 represents a promising translational strategy for caries prevention in vulnerable populations, especially those undergoing radiotherapy for HNC.

RevDate: 2025-10-11

Lane MM, McGuinness AJ, Mohebbi M, et al (2025)

Food- vs. supplement-based very-low-energy diets and gut microbiome composition in women with high body mass index: A randomized controlled trial.

Cell reports. Medicine pii:S2666-3791(25)00490-2 [Epub ahead of print].

In a single-blind, two-arm, randomized controlled-feeding trial (May 2021-February 2022), 47 women (30-65 years, BMI 30-45 kg/m[2]) are randomized to either a food-based or a supplement-based very-low-energy diet (VLED: 800-900 kcal/d) for 3 weeks. The food-based VLED comprises pre-packaged meals (∼93% whole-food ingredients), while the supplement-based VLED comprises shakes, soups, bars, and desserts (∼70% industrial ingredients). The primary outcome is species-level alpha diversity (Shannon index). Secondary outcomes include species richness, beta diversity, taxonomic composition, functional potential, anthropometrics, serum biomarkers, mental health, sleep, and gastrointestinal symptoms. Modified intention-to-treat (mITT) analyses (n = 45) assess diet group × time interactions as beta coefficients (β) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). A between-group differential change is observed for the Shannon index, with a greater increase in the food-based group (mITT β: 0.37, 95% CI: 0.15-0.60). The food-based group also shows greater species richness, smaller beta diversity shifts, and compositional changes preserving fiber-degrading, health-associated taxa.

RevDate: 2025-10-11

Ghafoor D, Hayakijkosol O, Prasetsincharoen N, et al (2025)

Characterisation of the gut microbiome and surveillance of antibiotic resistance genes in green sea turtles (Chelonia mydas).

Marine environmental research, 212:107605 pii:S0141-1136(25)00662-2 [Epub ahead of print].

Green sea turtles (Chelonia mydas) are globally endangered marine herbivores that maintain the health of seagrass and coastal ecosystems. Their populations are declining due to human activities, including environmental pollution, which can disrupt gut microbial communities and compromise nutrition, immunity, and overall health. In this study, cloacal swabs from 139 green sea turtles categorised as captive juveniles, captive adults and wild stranded animals in the Gulf of Thailand, were analysed via shotgun metagenomic sequencing to elucidate bacterial taxonomic diversity and ARG profiles. In captive juveniles, Pseudomonadota was the most abundant phylum, followed by Ascomycota and Basidiomycota. In captive adults, Pseudomonadota exhibited an even greater predominance, with only minor contributions from unclassified bacteria and other taxa. In wild stranded green sea turtles, Pseudomonadota was dominant in their gut microbiome, but this was accompanied by notable levels of Actinomycetota, Bacteroidota, and Bacillota. Stranded turtles exhibited highest microbial diversity and variability, while captive adult turtles showed the lowest. Resistome profiling also revealed significant differences in the relative abundance of antibiotic resistance genes across all three groups. MacB (macrolide resistance) was the most abundant gene overall, with the highest abundance observed in juveniles (4.8 %). Stranded turtles exhibited elevated levels of TetA(58) (tetracycline resistance, 2.6 %) and msbA (nitroimidazole resistance, 2.2 %), while adults showed the greatest enrichment of Ecol_fabG_TRC (triclosan resistance, 3.8 %) and TxR (tetracycline resistance, 3.6 %). These data demonstrate that marked variability existed in the gut microbiome and resistome of green sea turtles across different life stages in captive or wild environments. This offers critical insights for the development of targeted conservation strategies and health management practices for both wild and captive green sea turtles. Strategies to mitigate the spread of antibiotic resistance should be developed.

RevDate: 2025-10-11

Dias MF, Nogueira YJA, de Albuquerque GS, et al (2025)

A systematic review on the associations between Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and gut microbiome.

Journal of psychiatric research, 191:597-603 pii:S0022-3956(25)00616-8 [Epub ahead of print].

Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a prevalent neurodevelopmental condition in childhood, and growing evidence suggests a potential link between gut microbiome (GM) and ADHD symptoms via the microbiota-gut-brain axis. This systematic review aimed to evaluate current evidence on the associations between human GM and ADHD, addressing microbial composition, diversity measures, and potential pathways through which microbiota could be associated with the symptoms. A systematic search was conducted in PubMed, Embase, and Scopus databases. Fourteen studies met the eligibility criteria, which focused on original research assessing GM characteristics in individuals with ADHD. Selected articles comprised a total of 1319 participants, 67 % male, from Europe (53 %) and East Asia (47 %), mostly with children and adolescents aged 4-18 years. Alterations in microbial composition were observed among ADHD patients; including higher relative abundance of Agathobacter and Ruminococcus gnavus and decreased Faecalibacterium, identified in different studies. Results regarding alpha- and beta-diversity were inconclusive. There was also evidence of links between GM and inflammatory markers and neurotransmitter-related pathways. Despite current limitations, emerging data suggest that GM may play a role in ADHD pathophysiology, supporting its potential as a target for personalized therapeutic strategies.

RevDate: 2025-10-11

Godefroy E, F Altare (2025)

Deciphering and harnessing gut microbiota-associated immune regulation in acute graft-versus-host disease.

Current opinion in immunology, 97:102676 pii:S0952-7915(25)00152-9 [Epub ahead of print].

Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation represents a curative treatment of choice for numerous severe hematological malignancies. While donor-derived transplanted T cells can limit disease relapse (GvT/GvL effect), they also induce, in 30-50% of the patients, acute graft-versus-host disease (aGvHD), a severe condition with elevated mortality and comorbidity rates. Gut microbiota composition has been associated with aGvHD outcome. This observation created a substantial research interest, and individual gut microbiota commensals have been acknowledged for their ability to promote immune regulation, both locally and systemically, and thus limit aGvHD-related inflammation. The mechanisms by which commensals support immune homeostasis are being decrypted at a remarkable rate. However, the trillions of micro-organisms comprising the gut microbiome interact, both directly and indirectly, with local immune cells, which is all the more critical in the context of heavy conditioning regimens these patients undergo, themselves damaging mucosal tissues and prompting inflammation. Commensals can help preserve the gut barrier integrity by actively limiting deleterious inflammation processes. Mechanistically deciphering the intricate crosstalk between gut microbes and gut immune cells, both at the species level and globally, represents a colossal challenge, but holds great promise in predicting and harnessing numerous pathological processes, including aGvHD. This review aims to examine the acquired knowledge concerning immunoregulatory responses driven by gut microbiota in the context of aGvHD. Recent preclinical and clinical studies harnessing such pathways proved to be encouraging, while substantial hurdles subsist regarding how to successfully harness this complex host/microbiota interplay to constrain aGvHD.

RevDate: 2025-10-11

Ghaffar A, Liljebjelke K, Checkley SL, et al (2025)

Exploring the indoor airborne microbiome and resistome in layer barns across Alberta, Canada.

Research in veterinary science, 196:105930 pii:S0034-5288(25)00404-7 [Epub ahead of print].

The air in poultry barns carries a diverse range of microbial communities including potential opportunistic pathogens, which are important for both animal and human health. Bacteria carrying antimicrobial resistance genes (ARGs) can become airborne within poultry barns and be transmitted to animals and poultry workers, presenting a serious One Health concern. This study was aimed at characterizing the microbiome and resistome of bioaerosols sampled from layer chicken barns across Alberta. In total, 15 barns (9 cage housed and 6 floor housed) were sampled in this study using a microbial air sampler to characterize the microbiome and resistome using a shotgun metagenomic sequencing approach. The most abundant bacterial phyla found in the air of both housing systems for pullets were Bacilliota, Actinomycetota, and Bacteroidota. The respiratory pathogens such as Gallibacterium anatis, Ornithobacterium rhinotracheale, and Pasteurella multocida were relatively more abundant in the air of cage-housed barns, whereas Escherichia coli and Avibacterium paragallinarum were more prevalent in floor-housed barns. In total, 113 unique ARGs subtypes from 19 classes of antimicrobials were identified in this study. ARGs were significantly more abundant in the air of cage-housed barns compared to floor-housed barns. In particular, genes associated with resistance to tetracyclines, lincosamides, and macrolides were more frequently detected in cage-housed environments. Overall, both microbial and resistance gene levels were higher in the bioaerosols of cage-housed barns than in those from floor-housed pullet barns. The study results demonstrate the potential for air as a reservoir of ARGs and highlights microbial differences within cage and floor housing.

RevDate: 2025-10-11
CmpDate: 2025-10-11

Fernández-Lucas J (2025)

From tradition to innovation: the ongoing evolution of AMB express.

AMB Express, 15(1):147 pii:10.1186/s13568-025-01970-x.

Since its foundation in 2011, AMB Express has grown from a journal focused on classical applied microbiology and industrial biotechnology into a multidisciplinary platform covering microbiome research, antimicrobials, biocatalysis, and synthetic biology. In this Editorial, an overview of our journal's evolution is provided, along with an outline of the directions in which it should develop to maintain its status as a reference journal of applied microbiology and biotechnology.

RevDate: 2025-10-11
CmpDate: 2025-10-11

Hatami F, Aghelan Z, Pouya MR, et al (2025)

Gut microbiota reconstitution and control of α-synucleinopathy with β-glucans: a promising approach for individuals with parkinson's disease.

Metabolic brain disease, 40(7):287.

Parkinson's disease (PD) ranks as the second most prevalent neurodegenerative condition affecting individuals in their middle age and beyond. Its hallmark features include the abnormal accumulation of α-synuclein protein and the progressive loss of dopaminergic neurons. A substantial body of evidence supports the notion that an imbalance in the gut microbiome, known as dysbiosis, contributes to the misfolding and accumulation of α-synuclein, a key pathological feature of PD. This finding raises the possibility that restoring the gut microbiome, particularly the bacteria associated with α-synuclein, could serve as a promising therapeutic approach for PD. There is evidence that β-glucan can play an important role in the reconstitution of gut microbiome. In this regard, this study reviews the evidence showing the role of β-glucan in reducing α-synuclein accumulation and mitigating the progression of PD. This scooping review study presents promising prospects for advancing novel therapeutic approaches to benefit individuals with PD.

RevDate: 2025-10-11
CmpDate: 2025-10-11

Malik MZ, Nizam R, Jacob S, et al (2025)

Microbial dysbiosis in oral cavity determines obesity status in adolescents.

Cellular and molecular life sciences : CMLS, 82(1):354.

The prevalence of obesity is rapidly increasing among adolescents in Kuwait. The ecological and dynamic changes within the oral microbiota during this developmental stage remain elusive. This study aimed to investigate the impact of body mass index (BMI) on salivary microbiome diversity and composition in Kuwaiti adolescents by utilizing next-generation sequencing technologies. DNA was extracted from saliva samples of 62 Kuwaiti adolescents enrolled in the nationwide Kuwait Healthy Lifestyle Study, categorized as underweight, normal weight, overweight, and obese based on their BMI percentiles. The 16 S metagenomic profiling was performed to identify the key oral lineages and genera associated with obesity through comprehensive analysis involving taxonomic composition, co-occurrence networks, and key metabolic profiles. Our study reveals an inverse relationship between oral bacterial diversity and obesity status in Kuwaiti adolescents. The obese and overweight groups showed comparatively low microbial taxa compared to those of normal weight. We identified three potential microbial biomarkers linked to obesity and overweight: Prevotella melaninogenica, Veillonella dispar, and Veillonella parvula. The abundance of Neisseria subflava and Rothia mucilaginosa in normal weight adolescents indicates their role in weight homeostasis. In- silico analysis of differentially expressed microbiota revealed increased activity of major metabolic enzymes such as glucose- 6- phosphate dehydrogenase, pyruvate oxidase, and glycogen phosphorylase, along with oxidative stress- related enzymes including superoxide reductase and glutathione peroxidase in obese and over-weight adolescents. Conversely, normal weight adolescents exhibited heightened activity of pyruvate synthase and tRNA- methyltransferase, which are linked to antioxidative pathways and balanced energy metabolism. Our study highlights taxonomic and functional shifts in the oral microbiota of Kuwaiti adolescents across varying BMI categories, signifying key microbial markers that could pave the way for future research focused on microbiome- targeted interventions in obesity management.

RevDate: 2025-10-11

Ajith TA, JK Sreejith (2025)

Microbiota-gut-brain axis and probiotics: potential therapeutic strategies for treating Alzheimer's disease.

Nutritional neuroscience [Epub ahead of print].

The gut-brain axis explains that changes in the intestinal microbiota influence Alzheimer's disease (AD). Short-chain fatty acids produced by the gut microbiome regulate the permeability of the gut and blood-brain barrier. Furthermore, they upregulate brain-derived neurotrophic factor, promote angiogenesis and neurogenesis, and control tau and Aβ proteins, microglial activity, apoptosis, oxidative damage, M1/M2 polarization of microglia, and neuroinflammation, which eventually improves cognitive impairment. This effect is mediated by modification of serotonin, dopamine, and γ-aminobutyric acid levels. Compared to healthy controls, mild cognitive impairment and AD were associated with low levels of Firmicutes and Bifidobacterium and high levels of Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes. Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium species were effective in improving cognitive function. More longitudinal research is needed to investigate precision medicine in patients with dysbiosis in the preclinical stages of the disease. This review describes the role of the gut microbiome and probiotics in AD.

RevDate: 2025-10-11

Perez-Garcia J, Bozack AK, Rifas-Shiman SL, et al (2025)

The Nasal Microbiome and Associations With Environmental Exposures and Respiratory Health.

Allergy [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: The nasal microbiome is directly in contact with the external environment and may play a role in respiratory health. This study aimed to evaluate the association of the nasal microbiome with air pollutants, meteorological conditions, and respiratory health in adolescents.

METHODS: We analyzed the nasal microbiome in 416 adolescents from the Project Viva cohort (mean age 13 years and 52% female). We tested for the association of alpha diversity, nasotypes, and bacterial genera abundance with environmental exposures from the past 2 days to the past year (PM2.5, NO2, O3, temperature, humidity, residential greenness) and respiratory outcomes (asthma, hay fever, wheezing, IgE, aeroallergen sensitization, FeNO, lung function) through regression models adjusted for confounders and corrected using a false discovery rate (FDR) < 5%.

RESULTS: Bacterial diversity was positively associated with hay fever and short-term exposure to NO2, while it was negatively correlated with temperature (FDR < 0.05). Adolescents whose nasal microbiome was dominated by Moraxella were exposed in the past week to lower O3 levels (ORs: 0.73-0.76) and higher temperature and humidity (ORs: 1.19-1.26). Staphylococcus dominance was positively associated with aeroallergen sensitization compared to Propionibacterium dominance (OR: 4.48, FDR = 0.03). Thirteen and eight bacterial genera abundance were associated with short-to-medium-term exposures (PM2.5, NO2, temperature) and respiratory outcomes (hay fever, wheezing, IgE, FeNO, lung function) (FDR < 0.05). Staphylococcus, Corynebacterium, Pelomonas, Lactococcus, Lachnospiraceae (unclassified), and Faecalibacterium abundance were associated with both environmental exposures and respiratory traits.

CONCLUSIONS: Nasal microbiome diversity was associated with hay fever, NO2, and temperature exposure. Multiple short-to-medium-term environmental exposures and respiratory outcomes were associated with nasotypes and bacterial genera abundance in adolescents.

RevDate: 2025-10-11

Al-Mufti SM, Abdulkareem AA, Chasib NH, et al (2025)

Long Noncoding RNA Malat1 and Neat1 Associated With Dysbiotic Microbiome and Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition in Periodontitis.

Molecular oral microbiology [Epub ahead of print].

INTRODUCTION: The regulatory mechanisms of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) involved in periodontitis pathogenesis are poorly understood. Consequently, this study aimed to investigate the association of the long noncoding (lnc) RNAs, NEAT1 and MALAT1, with EMT in periodontitis.

METHODS: Gingival tissue samples (n = 57) were obtained from periodontitis patients indicated for surgical treatment and healthy control individuals. Full mouth periodontal charting was recorded for all patients together with collection of subgingival biofilm samples to determine bacterial load for key-periodontal pathogens. Histopathological analysis was used to assess inflammatory cell infiltration, and RT-qPCR analysis was performed to quantify the expression of the key EMT biomarkers of E-cadherin, β-catenin, Snail1 and vimentin, and the lncRNAs of Neat1 and Malat1.

RESULTS: The clinical parameters and percentage of inflammatory cell infiltration were significantly higher in the periodontitis group compared with healthy controls. In periodontitis, expressions of Malat1 and E-cadherin were significantly downregulated, whereas Neat1, Snail1 and vimentin were significantly upregulated in comparison to controls. Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) analyses demonstrated moderate-to-good diagnostic accuracy of Neat1, Malat1, Snail1, E-cadherin and vimentin (area under the curve [AUC]: 70.3%, 67.5%, 78.7%, 89.9% and 74.3%, respectively) to discriminate periodontal health from disease.

CONCLUSION: Probing pocket depth, bleeding scores, expression of Neat1, red complex bacteria (Porphyromonas gingivalis and Treponema denticola) and downregulation of Malat1 and E-cadherin were strongly associated with EMT. Data also highlighted an association between Neat1 and Malat1 with the induction of the EMT phenotype in periodontitis, and these lncRNAs may therefore provide novel diagnostic biomarkers.

RevDate: 2025-10-11
CmpDate: 2025-10-11

Wang Z, Wang S, Chen Y, et al (2025)

Ultrasound-assisted betaine-based natural deep eutectic solvents for green extraction of total phenols and flavonoids from Lithocarpus litseifolius: Mechanistic insights and anti-hyperuricemic applications.

Food research international (Ottawa, Ont.), 220:117048.

To develop an ecologically suitable and efficient method for the simultaneous extraction of total polyphenols (TP) and total flavonoids (TF) from Lithocarpus litseifolius (L. litseifolius), this study employed natural deep eutectic solvents (NADES) combined with ultrasound-assisted extraction. Betaine-acetic acid (1:2) was identified as the most effective NADES for extracting the target components. The extraction conditions were optimized using a Box-Behnken design. Under the optimized conditions, the extraction yields were 6.682 % for TP and 9.230 % for TF, closely matching the predicted yields of TP (6.697 %) and TF (9.241 %). These yields were 1.78-4.77 times and 1.73-7.82 times higher than those achieved using traditional solvents, demonstrating their favorable efficiency. HPLC results indicated that phloridzin (38.68 mg/g) and trilobatin (26.36 mg/g) were the primary components of the L.litseifolius extract. The kinetic and thermodynamic models were fitted to the extraction process, and the synergistic effect was verified via SEM, FT-IR, [1]H NMR, and IGMH. Experimental results from both in vivo and in vitro studies demonstrated that the extract exhibited a significant uric acid-lowering effect. It significantly reduced serum uric acid, creatinine, and blood urea nitrogen levels, inhibited liver and serum xanthine oxidase activity, and alleviated hepatorenal pathological damage in hyperuricemic mice. Furthermore, microbiome analysis indicated that the extract restored intestinal homeostasis by modulating beneficial bacterial abundance and improving gut microbiota composition. Spearman correlation analysis revealed strong associations between altered gut microbiota and hyperuricemia-related physiological indicators. This study provides a green and efficient extraction method for TP and TF from L.litseifolius and reveals the anti-hyperuricemic potential of its extract.

RevDate: 2025-10-11
CmpDate: 2025-10-11

Huang X, Wu L, Zhang Y, et al (2025)

Guide the design of lactic acid bacteria synthesis community through computational metabolic interaction experimental pipeline.

Food research international (Ottawa, Ont.), 220:117046.

Understanding whether ecological assembly principles can inform synthetic microbial community construction remains a critical challenge in fermented food research, hindered by the complexity of natural ecosystems. Here, we integrate top-down metabolic modeling with bottom-up experimental validation to establish a generalizable framework for food microbial community engineering. Genome-scale metabolic modeling of 507 spontaneously assembled lactic acid bacterial (LAB) communities revealed a significant enrichment of cooperative interactions in naturally fermented ecosystems compared to randomly assembled consortia. This cooperative propensity was driven by amino acid auxotrophies shaped by biosynthetic cost trade-offs, which structured cross-feeding networks across phylogenetically distant strains. Leveraging these ecological patterns, we developed a computational model that quantifies metabolic interaction costs to predict optimal strain combinations. We characterized 15 functional lactic acid bacterial species isolated from fermented foods based on their auxotrophic profiles and interaction capacities. Synthetic communities (2-6 members) engineered via this framework exhibited superior stress resilience (e.g., resistance to osmotic pressure and lactate accumulation) and accelerated substrate utilization compared to non-cooperative communities. Resource conversion efficiency increased by 18 %-37 % in cooperative communities, driven by complementary amino acid exchange. These findings establish metabolic interdependencies as a key driver of community assembly in both natural and synthetic contexts. Our approach provides actionable insights for designing robust starter cultures tailored to industrial fermentation challenges, advancing precision control in food microbiome engineering.

RevDate: 2025-10-11
CmpDate: 2025-10-11

Devoy C, McLaughlin RA, Cronin C, et al (2025)

Operational determinants of recruitment and biospecimen collection in translational observational studies: a multi-site comparative analysis.

Journal of translational medicine, 23(1):1075.

BACKGROUND: Biospecimen collection from study participants is essential for translational research, but operational challenges in study setup and conduct often impede successful delivery. This study uses a comparative approach to explore key logistical and staffing factors influencing setup duration, recruitment efficiency, sample acquisition, and data completeness across three investigator-led microbiome-wide association studies (MWAS) conducted at cancer centres in Ireland.

METHODS: Three academic observational MWAS enrolling participants with cancers of the breast, gastrointestinal tract, lung, biliary system, kidney, and skin were compared. Data from three cancer centres were analysed. Key variables included study team composition, administrative infrastructure, and full-time equivalent (FTE) research staffing. Metrics assessed included setup duration, recruitment rates, sample acquisition, and data completeness. Descriptive statistics, correlation analyses, and regression models were used to examine relationships between staffing and study performance.

RESULTS: Setup duration ranged from 30 days (Site B, with a pre-established trials unit) to 390 days (Site A, with no dedicated setup personnel). At Site C, the addition of an Academic Clinical Trials Coordinator reduced the remaining setup timeline from 274 to 185 days. Recruitment rates ranged from 1.1 to 1.3 participants/month, with the highest rates at sites with dedicated research nurses (RN +). Sample acquisition was 100% at RN + sites and 70.5% at the RN- site. Site C achieved full data completeness, defined as comprehensive documentation of screening, exclusions, and follow-up outcomes. Statistical modelling suggested that dedicated staffing (both administrative and clinical) was associated with improvements across all metrics, although small sample size limited statistical significance.

CONCLUSIONS: Dedicated administrative and clinical trial personnel significantly may enhance study efficiency, participant recruitment, and biospecimen collection in academic translational research. This study provides practical insights for improving study design and infrastructure planning in future observational studies. To our knowledge, this is the first multi-site comparative evaluation of operational determinants in academic MWAS.

RevDate: 2025-10-11
CmpDate: 2025-10-11

Han X, Du L, Dou Y, et al (2025)

Orally ingested nanosilica causes liver-specific accumulation and induces liver senescence and fibrosis via the microbiota-gut-liver axis.

Journal of nanobiotechnology, 23(1):645.

BACKGROUND: The increased use of nanosilica (SiO2 NPs) poses a safety risk to public health. Current research on the tissue distribution and microbiota-gut-liver crosstalk toxicity of orally ingested SiO2 NPs remains poorly understood. In this study, we examined the distribution of SiO2 NPs by gavage in major organs as well as liver senescence and fibrotic injury induced by microbiota-gut-liver crosstalk following the sub-chronic oral ingestion thereof. In addition, probiotics were administered to investigate their protective potential against SiO2 NPs-induced hepatotoxicity.

RESULTS: Our results showed that C57BL/6J mice that received orally administered SiO2 NPs for 12 w exhibited gut dysbiosis, imbalance of metabolites (short-chain fatty acids and lactate), intestinal barrier damage, and disruption of gut homeostasis. Furthermore, ICP-OES revealed the silicon accumulation in the Liver, with 165% increase compared to the control, higher than that in other tissue. Liver exhibited functional abnormalities and underwent Lipid deposition, autophagy, senescence and fibrosis. 16S rRNA sequencing analysis demonstrated that SiO2 NPs reduced the abundance of probiotic Muribaculum and Ligilactobacillus, while increasing that of pathogenic Helicobacter. Notably, supplementation with probiotics remodelled the gut microbiome, particularly corrected the microbial communities disrupted by SiO2 NPs, increased the proliferation of other probiotics, and reduced harmful bacteria. Moreover, the results of Masson staining, Nile red staining, and immunofluorescence showed that probiotic supplementation ameliorated liver lipid deposition, senescence, and fibrosis induced by the oral ingestion of SiO2 NPs. Mechanistically, the TLR4/NF-κB and caspase-3-cytochrome C pathways may be involved in SiO2 NPs-induced hepatotoxicity and probiotic regulation.

CONCLUSIONS: Continuous oral ingestion of SiO2 NPs induced liver-specific accumulation, and caused abnormal deposition of liver lipids, senescence and fibrosis via microbiota-gut-liver crosstalk. Microbial therapy involving probiotic supplementation mitigated SiO2 NPs-induced hepatotoxicity and exerted protective effects. This study provides a scientific reference for the rational application, risk management, and prevention of the harmful effects caused by SiO2 NPs.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Michel A, Leoz M, Nesi N, et al (2025)

Impact of RNA extraction on respiratory microbiome analysis using third-generation sequencing.

BMC genomics, 26(1):908.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-11

Mao K, Lu G, Qiu Q, et al (2025)

Influence of creatine pyruvate on newly received cattle: insights from metagenomics and metabolomics.

BMC microbiology, 25(1):658.

Transport stress is a critical factor affecting the health and growth performance of beef cattle, potentially leading to oxidative stress, inflammation, and metabolic disorders. Creatine pyruvate (CrPyr), as a potential stress alleviator, has unclear mechanisms of action. We monitored the growth of 17 Simmental calves (control, n = 8; CrPyr, n = 9) over 30 days post-transportation, collecting rumen and blood samples on days 1/4, and 30. This study aims to investigate the effects of CrPyr on the growth performance, rumen microbiome, and metabolome of calves subjected to transport stress. Results showed that CrPyr increased average daily gain and antioxidant capacity, while reducing the level of stress hormones and inflammation. In the 4 days post-transport, CrPyr mainly increases Ruminococcus abundance to boost ruminal nitrogen metabolism, providing substrates for microbial protein synthesis. CrPyr also provides energy for the proliferation of Ruminococcus by regulating ATP synthesis genes (ATPVC) and enriching purine metabolism products. Meanwhile, it strengthens the host's amino acid metabolism, especially aspartate, to enhance antioxidative capacity. By day 30, CrPyr primarily boosts Prevotella abundance to regulate VFA synthesis, supplying host energy. It regulates the ATP synthesis gene ATPF0A and enriches purine metabolism products, supporting Prevotella growth. Increased citric acid and ATP levels further aid host growth. The findings distinctly demonstrate that the mechanisms by which CrPyr alleviates transport stress through the regulation of the rumen microbiome and metabolome, and confirms that its effects are time-dependent. These findings provide a theoretical basis for the development of stress-alleviation strategies based on CrPyr and hold significant implications for enhancing the health and production performance of beef cattle.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-11

Leoni C, Marzano M, Filomena E, et al (2026)

Digital Droplet PCR (ddPCR) for Absolute Quantification of 16S rRNA Copy Number in Metagenomic Data.

Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.), 2969:235-247.

Digital Droplet PCR (ddPCR) is a quantitative PCR method that offers high sensitivity and accuracy in measuring the amount of nucleic acid in a sample, without the need of a standard curve. In ddPCR, a single sample is partitioned into up to 20,000 droplets, using the water-oil emulsion technology, and the amplification reaction occurs within each droplet using a fluorescent hydrolysis probe (Taqman) or a DNA-binding fluorescent dye. Following PCR, the emitted signals are individually measured in each droplet. Here, we describe a ddPCR optimized protocol for accurately quantifying the total copy number of the 16S rRNA gene in a metagenomic DNA sample. The protocol utilizes a primer pair, targeting the 16S V5-V6 hypervariable regions, in combination with a double-strand DNA-binding fluorescent dye.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-11

Yao J, Yuan M, Fan L, et al (2025)

Effect of long term-consecutive monoculture on fungal community structure and function in the rhizosphere of Chinese yam.

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, 118(11):169.

Continuous cropping obstacle from Chinese yam (Dioscorea spp.) is widespread in China, and it seriously reduced the yield and quality. Rhizosphere soil microbiome is rich and associated with continuous cropping obstacle. However, the effect of long-term consecutive monoculture (LTCM) of Chinese yam on rhizosphere soil fungal community is still limited. In this study, fields that were consecutively cropped with Chinese yam for 1, 10 and 20 years were subjected to rhizosphere soil fungal analysis. High-throughput sequencing was used to characterize rhizosphere soil fungal community structure and function, and to determine the effect of long-term consecutive monoculture (LTCM). Results indicated that LTCM induced soil acidification, increased concentration of soil available potassium (AK) and available phosphorus (AP), increased the richness but decreased the evenness of fungal community. However, the Shannon index in YF_10Y fungal community showed the lowest value. Increasing years of monoculture resulted in significant differentiation in community composition, marked by a reduction of biocontrol fungi and an increase of pathogens. Additionally, consecutive monoculture decreased the rate of carbohydrate and amino acid degradation. The comprehensive analysis conducted in this study provides insight into rhizosphere fungal structure and function in response to LTCM of Chinese yam. Information obtained in this study could be used for the development of new microbial fertilizers for Chinese yam, which would mitigate the problems associated with continuous monoculture.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Xiang Q, Yang K, Cui L, et al (2025)

Global exploration of drought-tolerant bacteria in the wheat rhizosphere reveals microbiota shifts and functional taxa enhancing plant resilience.

Nature food [Epub ahead of print].

Drought stress impacts plant-microbe interactions, reshaping microbial community composition and biogeochemical cycling, thereby reducing crop productivity and threatening food security. However, the specific microbial responses and roles of plant-derived metabolites remain underexplored. Here we reveal that drought stress shifts the composition of wheat-associated microbiota across the phyllosphere, rhizosphere and root endosphere by favouring Actinobacteria and Ascomycota while depleting Proteobacteria and Basidiomycota. Targeted single-cell sorting and sequencing identified 21 active drought-tolerant bacteria (DTB) enriched in genes related to plant fitness and nutrient cycling. These DTB showed significant positive correlations with drought-enriched plant phytochemicals such as jasmonic acid and pipecolic acid. Moreover, the inoculation of synthetic community including four identified drought-tolerant taxa significantly stimulates the wheat growth under drought stress. A global exploration confirmed the widespread distribution of DTB, underscoring their promising potential to enhance crop resilience. This study provides new insights into drought-induced microbiome shifts and highlights microbial candidates for improving crop resilience in a changing climate.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Yoo JS, Jung DJ, Goh B, et al (2025)

Human gut bacteria produce structurally related monoglycolipids with contrasting immune functions.

Nature microbiology [Epub ahead of print].

Gut symbiont Bacteroides fragilis can produce α-galactosylceramides (BfaGCs), sphingolipids with immunomodulatory functions that regulate colonic natural killer T (NKT) cells. However, their synthesis pathway and whether other human gut bacteria can produce them are unclear. Here, using genetic and metabolomic approaches, we mapped the sphingolipid biosynthesis pathway of B. fragilis and determined that α-galactosyltransferase (agcT) is essential and sufficient for colonic NKT cell regulation in mice. The distribution of agcT is restricted to only a few species among Bacteroidales. However, structural homologues of AgcT, such as BgsB, are widely distributed in gut microbiota and produce α-glycosyldiacylglycerols (aGDGs), particularly in Enterococcus. Analysis of infant gut metagenomes revealed that B. fragilis predominantly accounts for agcT abundance regardless of the cohort, but bgsB-encoding bacteria were taxonomically diverse and showed dynamic changes with host age. In addition, aGDGs from bgsB-encoding species act as antagonistic ligands for BfaGC-mediated NKT cell activation in vitro and in vivo. Our findings highlight the distinct natures of immunoactive glycolipid-producing symbionts and their relevance in the human gut microbiome, particularly in early life.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Mons E, Henderickx JGE, Sanders IMJG, et al (2025)

Experimental glycopeptide antibiotic EVG7 prevents recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection by sparing members of the Lachnospiraceae family.

Nature communications, 16(1):9017.

Oral vancomycin has a long history as the first-line treatment for Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI), but its use is associated with high relapse rates. Antibiotics that more selectively target C. difficile while sparing protective commensal gut bacteria, have the potential to prevent recurrent CDI (rCDI). Here, we investigate the experimental glycopeptide antibiotic, EVG7, in the context of rCDI. In vitro susceptibility assays reveal that clinical C. difficile isolates are up to 16-times more sensitive to EVG7 (MIC = 0.063-0.25 mg/L) compared to vancomycin (MIC = 0.5-2 mg/L). In a validated mouse model of rCDI in male mice, low dose oral EVG7 (0.04 mg/mL in drinking water) more effectively treats primary CDI and prevents recurrence, outperforming a 10-fold higher dose of vancomycin. Subsequent microbiome analysis and in vitro susceptibility testing reveal that EVG7 preserves Lachnospiraceae, a family of commensal bacteria associated with protection against C. difficile colonization.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Whiteside SA, McGinniss JE, Deek RA, et al (2025)

Lung transplant for CF: Low lung bacterial burden and immune mediators in year one associate with clad development.

Journal of cystic fibrosis : official journal of the European Cystic Fibrosis Society pii:S1569-1993(25)02486-5 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Lung transplantation is commonly required for advanced lung disease in cystic fibrosis (CF). Long-term lung allograft survival is limited primarily by chronic lung allograft dysfunction (CLAD), and microbial factors have been implicated in CLAD development. However studies have not specifically investigated CF patients despite the unique microbe-rich nature of the CF respiratory tract. We investigated whether early post-transplantation lung microbiome features associate with CLAD development.

METHODS: We investigated a longitudinal cohort of 23 CF patients undergoing lung transplantation. Lung lavage was collected from donor lungs, and from recipient allografts serially during the first year post-transplantation. Patients were followed for a median of 4.9 years. This was complemented by a case-control study of 8 CF patients sampled at incident CLAD along with non-CLAD CF transplant controls. Lung bacteria were enumerated by 16S rRNA gene sequencing and quantified by qPCR, and immune mediators investigated by multiplex assay.

RESULTS: Cohort patients who developed CLAD had lower lung bacterial burden, lower relative abundances of classic CF lung microbiota, and lower mediator levels during the first-year post-transplantation than those remaining CLAD-free. In contrast, incident CLAD showed elevated lung immune mediators but no microbiome differences.

CONCLUSIONS: Low lung bacterial content and immune mediators during the first year post-transplantation for CF associate CLAD, whereas CLAD onset is characterized by elevated immune mediators but no lung microbiome differences. Whether airway bacteria early after transplantation for CF may protect against CLAD or serve as a biomarker merits further study.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Yao H, Su Q, Dai Q, et al (2025)

Thallium exposure disturbs gut microbiota composition, metabolic function, and host gut energy metabolism in aged mice.

Food and chemical toxicology : an international journal published for the British Industrial Biological Research Association pii:S0278-6915(25)00561-7 [Epub ahead of print].

Gut microbiota regulates the development of environmental exposure-induced diseases. Although previous studies have reported the effect of thallium exposure on the gut microbiota of adult male mice, its effects on the aging gut microbiome, particularly in females, remain largely unexplored. Here, we showed that thallium exposure for 4 weeks altered fecal microbial β diversity in aged female and male mice, whereas a 2-week exposure did not. Combined LEfSe and indicator analyses revealed that in aged female mice, thallium exposure for 2 weeks increased Oscillibacter abundance, while exposure for 4 weeks increased the abundance of Lactobacillus, Limosilactobacillus, Adlercreutzia, and Priestia. In aged male mice, thallium exposure for 2 weeks increased the abundance of Rikenella, Bifidobacterium, Proteus, Enterococcus, and Chryseobacterium, while exposure for 4 weeks increased the abundance of Incertae_Sedis, Bifidobacterium, Clostridium, Christensenellaceae_R-7_group, and UCG-009. PICRUSt2 functional prediction analysis showed that thallium exposure may also affect energy metabolism-related pathways in gut bacteria. Thallium exposure significantly decreased C16:1 abundance in the colon, but not in the cecum, of aged male mice. Protein levels revealed that thallium exposure enhanced glycolysis in the cecum and colon of aged mice. Collectively, our findings reveal significant thallium-induced perturbations in the gut ecosystem and host metabolism in both the aged male and female cohorts, which may contribute to understanding thallium-induced health risks in the elderly.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Farzizadeh N, Najmi Z, Rosenbaum AJ, et al (2025)

Decoding Preterm Birth: Non-Invasive Biomarkers and Personalized Multi-Omics Strategies.

Developmental biology pii:S0012-1606(25)00292-1 [Epub ahead of print].

A birth that occurs prior to 37 weeks of gestation is referred to as preterm birth (PTB). PTB is a health concern globally with significant outcomes including neonatal morbidity and mortality. Advancements in multi-omics have revolutionized the understanding of PTB pathogenesis, offering new opportunities for early prediction and risk categorization. This review highlights emerging liquid biomarkers derived from proteomic, metabolomic, genomic, transcriptomic, and epigenomic studies, emphasizing the integrative power of multi-omics approaches. Proteomic analyses have revealed key proteins in maternal and fetal compartments associated with inflammatory and extracellular matrix pathways, while metabolomics have identified lipid and metabolite profiles linked to energy metabolism and fetal development. Genomic and epigenomic studies have uncovered genetic variations and microRNAs involved in uterine contractility and immune modulation, providing novel insights into PTB's molecular underpinnings. Transcriptomic research further underscores the act of long non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) in regulating gene expression and inflammatory responses. Multi-omics integration, coupled with machine learning models, has demonstrated superior predictive accuracy by synthesizing data across these domains, revealing intricate molecular interactions underlying PTB. Future research should prioritize longitudinal multi-omics studies to capture dynamic biological changes during pregnancy, expanding diverse population cohorts to enhance generalizability. Translating multi-omics insights into clinical practice necessitates collaborative efforts to develop cost-effective, accessible biomarker panels and establish standardized guidelines for implementation. These advancements hold the potential to transform prenatal care through personalized risk assessment and targeted preventive strategies, reducing the global burden of PTB.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Chalif J, Morton M, Haight P, et al (2025)

Assessment of Probiotic and Prebiotic Use in Gynecologic Cancer Patients: A Systematic Review.

American journal of obstetrics and gynecology pii:S0002-9378(25)00715-X [Epub ahead of print].

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate evidence on the impact of probiotics and prebiotics on clinical outcomes, treatment efficacy, quality of life, safety, and translational endpoints in patients with gynecologic cancers.

DATA SOURCES: A systematic search of PubMed, Embase, and Scopus was conducted in March 2023 and updated through September 2025. Grey literature sources (ClinicalTrials.gov, reference lists) were also reviewed.

STUDY ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: Eligible studies included randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and prospective interventional studies in women with gynecologic cancers (cervical, endometrial, ovarian, uterine, vulvar) undergoing treatment. Interventions were probiotic, prebiotic, or dietary fiber supplementation. Eligible outcomes included treatment toxicity, stool consistency, quality of life, postoperative outcomes, oncologic outcomes, safety, and microbiome endpoints. Exclusions were retrospective studies, case reports, reviews, conference abstracts, and studies without cancer-related outcomes.

Three independent reviewers screened studies using Covidence, with disagreements resolved by consensus or adjudication. Risk of bias was assessed with the Cochrane RoB 2.0 tool. Due to heterogeneity in strains, dosing, and outcomes, structured narrative synthesis was conducted rather than meta-analysis.

RESULTS: From 2,308 screened records, nine RCTs involving 663 patients were included. Seven studies evaluated probiotics and two assessed prebiotics/fiber. Most focused on radiation-induced toxicity in cervical (n=415) and endometrial cancer (n=170) patients. Probiotics significantly reduced incidence and severity of radiation-induced diarrhea, improved stool consistency, and decreased anti-diarrheal use (p<0.05). Prebiotics alone showed minimal benefit. One perioperative study found probiotics accelerated bowel recovery and reduced postoperative complications. Three translational studies showed probiotics reduced gut permeability but did not alter microbial composition. No trials examined chemotherapy or immunotherapy outcomes, progression-free survival, or overall survival. Adverse events were infrequent and no major safety concerns were identified.

CONCLUSIONS: Probiotic supplementation demonstrates consistent benefit in reducing radiation-induced gastrointestinal toxicity in gynecologic cancer patients, while prebiotics alone show limited efficacy. Evidence gaps include effects on chemotherapy, immunotherapy, oncologic outcomes, and survival. Heterogeneity in formulations limits clinical applicability, and standardized strain-specific trials are needed. Future research should evaluate long-term oncologic outcomes, optimize microbiome-directed interventions, and establish safety in immunocompromised populations.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Hu Z, Lei Y, Li T, et al (2025)

Strategic intercropping with mulberry (Morus alba L.) predictably modulates rhizosphere microbiome assembly and enriches pathways for secondary metabolite production.

Genomics pii:S0888-7543(25)00145-4 [Epub ahead of print].

Intercropping is a key strategy for sustainable agriculture, but its effects on the rhizosphere microbiome remain poorly understood. Here, we investigated how intercropping mulberry (Morus alba L.) with functionally distinct partners-a nitrogen-fixing legume (Pisum sativum), a saprotrophic fungus (Morchella esculenta), and a medicinal plant (Polygonatum sibiricum)-shapes its rhizosphere bacterial community. Compared to monoculture, all intercropping systems significantly increased bacterial diversity and established unique community structures and functional signatures. Legume intercropping specifically enriched nitrogen-cycling bacteria like Bradyrhizobium and enhanced nitrogen metabolism pathways, whereas fungal intercropping fostered anaerobic decomposers. Crucially, all systems enriched pathways for secondary metabolite biosynthesis, suggesting a potential to enhance mulberry's economic value. Our findings establish that strategic partner selection is a powerful microbiome design tool, enabling predictable modulation of rhizosphere function for sustainable mulberry cultivation.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Zhou X, Gao B, Cui H, et al (2025)

Antibiotic resistome, potential pathogenic bacteria and associated health risk in geogenic chromium groundwater.

Environmental research pii:S0013-9351(25)02269-8 [Epub ahead of print].

Geogenic chromium (Cr) contamination in groundwater poses a global environmental challenge. However, with antibiotic resistance remaining a public health threat, the occurrence and associated health risks of antibiotic resistomes in Cr contaminated groundwater and their linkages to geogenic Cr are poorly understood. Here, we assessed the groundwater microbiome, potential pathogenic bacteria, and antibiotic resistomes with associated health risks in geogenic Cr impacted groundwater across shallow (< 100 m) and deep (> 100 m) aquifers in a plateau from Northwestern China. A total of 174 antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) were detected with absolute abundances reaching 1.28×10[8] copies/L. Shallow and deep groundwater harbored distinct ARG profiles with significantly higher abundance and associated health risks presented in shallow groundwater (p < 0.01). A total of 332 potential pathogenic bacteria were identified, abundances of which 53.9% were strongly correlated to the prevalent ARGs. Toxic Cr(VI) as a potential co-selective agent was positively associated with elevated ARG-linked potential pathogenic bacteria and mobile genetic elements (MGEs). Our findings collectively revealed the geogenic Cr contaminated groundwater as a significant reservoir of ARGs and potential pathogens, highlighting the dual risks of geogenic Cr as both a toxicant and promoter for accelerating ARGs within aquifers.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Wang Y, Wang X, Gan B, et al (2025)

The "Butterfly Effect" of Heart Failure: Induced by the Combination of Polylactic Acid Nanoplastics and Copper from the Perspective of Gut Microbiome.

Chemico-biological interactions pii:S0009-2797(25)00399-0 [Epub ahead of print].

Plastic and heavy metal pollution have received extensive attention, but there is relatively little research on the damage to the gut-heart axis induced by the co-exposure to plastics and heavy metals. This study investigated the impact of the co-exposure of Polylactic acid nanoplastics (PLA-NPs) and copper (Cu) on heart failure (HF) in mice and explored the role of the gut microbiota in mediating this adverse outcome. Male C57BL/6J mice were divided into four groups: the Control group, the PLA-NPs group, the Cu group, and the Co-exposure group (PLA-NPs+Cu group). A 28-day exposure experiment was conducted. The research results indicate that, compared with the Single-exposure groups (PLA-NPs and Cu groups), the mice of Co-exposure group exhibited more severe toxic effects, including more pronounced myocardial hypertrophy and more severe myocardial fibrosis. These damages might be caused by increasing the heart's sensitivity to ferroptosis. Additionally, the co-exposure caused significant damage to the gut barrier and remarkable dysbiosis in the gut microbiota, such as a reduction in the abundances of beneficial bacteria like Lactobacillus. The fecal Microbiota Transplantation experiment confirmed that the alterations in gut microbiota play a pivotal role in the synergistic toxicity induced by PLA-NPs and Cu. This study for the first time reveals the mechanism of the combined effect of PLA-NPs and Cu on cardiac damage and emphasizes the crucial role of gut microbiota in this process.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Dedeepya SD, Goel V, NN Desai (2025)

Comment on "Beyond beauty: Neurocosmetics, the skin-brain axis, and the future of emotionally intelligent skincare".

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Li W, Zheng S, Xu X, et al (2025)

A conserved adaptor orchestrates co-secretion of synergistic type VI effectors in gut Bacteroidota.

Cell host & microbe pii:S1931-3128(25)00378-6 [Epub ahead of print].

Interbacterial competition is crucial for shaping microbial communities and is often mediated by type VI secretion systems (T6SSs) that inject effectors into competing bacteria. T6SS effectors are released via structural proteins such as VgrG, but the secretion timing and coordination are unclear. Here, we report two effectors, BtpeA (Bacteroides T6SS phosphatase effector A) and BtaeB (Bacteroides T6SS amidase effector B), within the Bacteroidota T6SS that exert distinct cell-wall destructive activities critical for interspecies competition but whose secretion is interdependent. BtpeA and BtaeB co-secretion requires an adaptor protein, BtapC (Bacteroides T6SS adaptor protein C), that mediates the sequential assembly of the pre-firing complex, VgrG-BtpeA-BtaeB-BtapC. Structural analyses of this quaternary complex elucidate multi-cargo loading mechanisms with a conserved loop in BtaeB serving as a "checkpoint" to ensure BtpeA co-secretion. During mouse colonization, the combined activities of BtpeA and BtaeB significantly exceed the sum of the individual effectors. These findings unveil a T6SS-mediated co-delivery mechanism that ensures functional synergism of effectors, highlighting potential applications in modulating gut microbiota.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Cheng M, Pan C, Peng J, et al (2025)

Gut microbiome and serum metabolome changes in gestational diabetes mellitus after diet-exercise intervention.

Journal of pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis, 268:117172 pii:S0731-7085(25)00513-8 [Epub ahead of print].

Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) poses risks to both the mother and fetus. Diet and exercise interventions (DEI) improve blood glucose control and pregnancy outcomes, but the underlying mechanisms, especially those involving the gut microbiota and serum metabolites, are unclear. In this study, we conducted a comparative analysis of pre- and post-DEI outcomes by assessing HbA1c, fasting glucose, the diversity and functional pathways of the gut microbiota, and serum metabolomics. Post-DEI, the women maintained normal glycemic levels without delivery complications or adverse neonatal outcomes. The gut microbiota alpha/beta diversity remained stable, although the abundances of specific species (e.g., Faecalibacterium sp. and Prevotellamassilia sp.) and functional pathways (e.g., flavonoid biosynthesis and bacterial chemotaxis) were altered. Metabolomics identified 132 differentially regulated metabolites (83 upregulated and 49 downregulated) enriched glycerophospholipids, steroids and steroid derivatives, fatty acyls, and carboxylic acids and derivatives. In conclusion, while DEI did not significantly alter the gut microbial community structure, it potentially exerted targeted modulatory effects on specific microbial functions in women with GDM. Furthermore, DEI also induced alterations in serum metabolites and associated metabolic functions.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Wang T, Yang Y, Hou J, et al (2025)

Lotus leaf extract (LLE) alleviates obesity through gut flora and its metabolites.

Food chemistry, 495(Pt 3):146433 pii:S0308-8146(25)03685-4 [Epub ahead of print].

In this study, we investigated the effects of lotus leaf extract (LLE) on HFD (high-fat diet)-induced obese mice and the metabolic functions of the gut microbiome on LLE. We found that LLE alleviates obesity partly through interactions with the gut microbiota. Oral LLE modulates gut microbiota structure and counteracts HFD-induced dysbiosis. Furthermore, we observed a significant increase in serum levels of O-Nornuciferine in LLE-treated mice, suggesting that the gut microbiota may play a potential role in metabolising LLE components to enhance the production of this metabolite. O-Nornuciferine was associated with improvements in dyslipidemia and hepatic steatosis. Molecular docking analysis indicated that O-Nornuciferine may bind to PGC-1α (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ coactivator-1α) in the liver and influence the expression of genes related to lipid metabolism. These results highlight the potential interplay between LLE and gut microbiota, and suggest that microbiota-derived O-Nornuciferine may contribute to the modulation of hepatic lipid metabolism.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Wang Q, Gao F, Zhu D, et al (2025)

Alterations in the oral microbiome detected during long-term follow-up of COVID-19 recovered patients.

Journal of infection and public health, 18(12):102983 pii:S1876-0341(25)00332-6 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: The oral biome was significantly altered in COVID-19 patients, but there is still a gap in long-term follow-up studies of the oral microbiota of recovering patients.

METHODS: We recruited 62 patients with a confirmed COVID-19 diagnosis and collected tongue moss samples at three time points: 1 month (RP1), 3 months (RP3) and 5 months (RP5) of rehabilitation. We then sequenced the tongue samples for 16S rRNA amplicons.

RESULTS: The results showed that there was no significant difference in the oral microbial composition of patients who had been rehabilitated for 3 months compared to those who had been rehabilitated for 1 month, whereas patients who had been rehabilitated for 5 months showed a significant increase in the diversity of the oral microbiome compared to those who had been rehabilitated for 1 month. In addition, we characterized the dynamics of the oral microbiome of COVID-19 patients during their rehabilitation.

CONCLUSION: As patients recover, the diversity of their oral microbiome gradually returns to normal, providing microbiological evidence for the clinical diagnosis and treatment strategies of COVID-19.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Murawska-Wlodarczyk K, Kushwaha P, Stokes O, et al (2025)

Depth-dependent heterogeneity in topsoil stockpiles influences plant-microbe interactions and revegetation success in arid mine reclamation.

The Science of the total environment, 1003:180673 pii:S0048-9697(25)02313-7 [Epub ahead of print].

Covering mine tailings with uncontaminated soil is a common strategy to mitigate environmental impacts and promote ecosystem recovery during post-mining land reclamation. Topsoil is often stockpiled for future use as a capping layer, but prolonged storage alters its physical, chemical, and microbial properties, often hindering revegetation. This study evaluated soil health parameters within the 28-meter depth profile of a 14-year-old copper mine topsoil stockpile to identify key indicators of revegetation success in semi-arid ecosystem. Using non-invasive root phenotyping in rhizoboxes, filled with soils collected from different depth layers, we monitored plant growth and assessed how biochemical variability in stockpile materials affects germination and early establishment. Machine learning models integrating soil properties, plant responses, and sequenced soil bacterial/archaeal and fungal DNA, identified key indicators influencing plant performance. Results revealed significant heterogeneity in soil quality across depths, with distinct biochemical and microbial profiles shaping vegetation establishment. The upper 10 m exhibited greater potential for supporting growth, with seedling survival reaching 95 %, whereas deeper layers showed drastically reduced survival, sometimes as low as 0 %, due to microbial shifts to anoxic conditions and elevated Fe and Mn toxicity. Fungal communities played a dominant role in germination, while archaea were more influential during later plant establishment. Soil parameter comparisons before and after the experiment indicated recovery processes initiated by plant-soil feedback, including fungal community renewal. These findings highlight the role of stockpile formation in preserving soil health attributes critical for ecological recovery and provide practical insights for optimizing land reclamation in semi-arid ecosystems.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Garg V, Armstrong E, Celeste A, et al (2025)

Multidisciplinary ambulatory management of malignant bowel obstruction (MAMBO) program in patients with advanced gynecological cancers: A prospective study.

Gynecologic oncology, 202:110-117 pii:S0090-8258(25)01009-1 [Epub ahead of print].

OBJECTIVES: This prospective study aimed to assess the feasibility of a risk-stratified, multidisciplinary ambulatory approach for managing malignant bowel obstruction (MBO) in patients with advanced gynecological cancer.

METHODS: A clinical risk-based MBO triage system was implemented by incorporating bowel function assessments, management regimes, and educational tools. An interdisciplinary team (IDT) guided treatment decisions. At risk patients received proactive management through nursing phone calls for up to 4 weeks, while patients with MBO continued proactive management for up to 8 weeks based on symptom resolution. The primary endpoint was the ratio of days alive and out of the hospital to days in the hospital within 60 days post-MBO diagnosis.

RESULTS: 92 patients (median age 62 years [range 31-83]) were enrolled. At enrollment, 49 % (n = 45) had MBO, and 51 % (n = 47) were at risk of MBO development. 7 % (n = 3) at-risk patients progressed to MBO in 4 weeks, while 93 % had symptom resolution with proactive outpatient management. Overall, 62 % (n = 57) of patients developed MBO during study period. Among these, 93 % (n = 53) needed inpatient care, with a median stay of 12.5 days (range 0-57) in the first 60 days. Median OS after MBO was 5.7 months (95 % CI, 3.6-8.4). The median of hospital-to-home ratio was 0.3 (range 0-19) within 60 days. MBO resolved in 42 % (n = 24) of the patients. Microbiome analysis showed lower Shannon diversity and species richness for MBO patients compared to those at risk.

CONCLUSION: This study confirms the feasibility of ambulatory management for MBO patients, using a risk-based MBO triage system guided by IDT.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Rezaie Pouya M, Aghelan Z, Hoseini S, et al (2025)

Associations of serum α-synuclein and 1,3-β-D-glucan levels with sleep architecture alterations in chronic insomnia disorder.

Behavioural brain research, 496:115869 pii:S0166-4328(25)00456-5 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Chronic insomnia disorder (CID) is a widespread sleep disorder linked to increased risks of various chronic diseases and often precedes neurodegenerative conditions such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease. Emerging evidence suggests that gut microbiome disturbances contribute to CID through the gut-brain axis, involving microbial metabolites and neuroactive proteins.

OBJECTIVES: This study explored the relationships between serum 1,3-β-D-glucan (a marker of intestinal permeability and microbial translocation), alpha-synuclein (αSyn, a neuronal protein implicated in neurodegeneration), and sleep architecture in chronic insomnia individuals compared to healthy controls.

METHODS: Blood samples were taken from 15 people who had been diagnosed with CID, based on their results from the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) and video-polysomnography tests. For comparison, blood was also collected from 15 healthy volunteers, whose sleep quality was assessed using the PSQI. Serum concentrations of 1,3-β-D-glucan and αSyn protein were measured using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).

RESULTS: The findings showed significantly elevated serum 1,3-β-D-glucan (p < 0.0001) and αSyn (p < 0.001) levels in the CID group, with a strong positive correlation between these markers (r = 0.964, p < 0.01). Moreover, increased αSyn levels were associated with alterations in sleep stages, particularly prolonged rapid eye movement (REM) sleep duration (r = 0.560, p < 0.05).

CONCLUSIONS: These findings support a mechanistic link between gut microbiota disruption, αSyn pathology, and altered sleep architecture in CID, highlighting novel pathways for understanding the neuroimmune mechanisms underlying sleep disturbances. Serum 1,3-β-D-glucan and αSyn may serve as potential biomarkers for identifying insomniac individuals at risk of synucleinopathies and offer novel targets for therapeutic intervention aimed at restoring gut health and improving sleep quality.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

de Kroon RR, Kreulen IAM, Davids M, et al (2025)

The gut as a source of infection for fungal pathogens: increased fecal Candida albicans precedes onset of Candida late-onset sepsis in very preterm infants.

The Journal of infectious diseases pii:8281732 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: The skin-to-blood route is traditionally considered the main pathway in Candida late-onset sepsis (LOS) development in preterm infants. However, emerging evidence suggests that the gut also serves as a source of infection. We aimed to characterize fecal mycobiota and microbiota profiles preceding onset of Candida LOS to assess the role of the preterm gut microbiome in disease development.

METHODS: In this multicenter, case-control study, very preterm infants (<30 weeks of gestation) with Candida LOS were included. Each case was matched to non-affected controls by gestational and postnatal age, hospital site, and/or cumulative antibiotic exposure prior to day of LOS onset (t=0). Fecal samples collected at t=0 and the five preceding days were analyzed using ITS1 and 16S RNA sequencing. Microbial amplicon yields, composition, and inter-kingdom correlations were assessed.

RESULTS: Of 2,397 screened infants, fecal samples were available for 8/19 infants with Candida LOS. In these 8 cases, the ITS/16S amplicon yield ratio was increased (p<0.001) and the relative abundance of fecal Candida albicans correlated positively with fungal amplicon yield (ρ=0.71, padj=0.005), suggesting increased absolute abundance up to five days before onset. Additionally, bacterial yields were significantly lower (p=0.02) and α-diversity was significantly decreased (p=0.012), compared to the controls.

CONCLUSIONS: Increased fecal C. albicans preceded Candida LOS onset, implicating the preterm gut as a potential source of infection. Reduced bacterial yields and diversity suggest ecological alterations that may facilitate Candida pathogenicity in the preterm gut. These findings support further research into gut-derived Candida LOS and potential for microbiota-targeted prevention strategies.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Zhang CR, Wang M, Wang L, et al (2025)

Differential composition of the pulmonary microbiome in HIV-positive versus HIV-negative patients with Pneumocystis jirovecii.

PloS one, 20(10):e0334220 pii:PONE-D-25-42200.

Pneumocystis jirovecii is frequently detected in HIV patients and individuals with compromised immune function. The clinical outcomes of these two groups differ significantly, yet the underlying reasons remain unclear, with limited studies addressing this issue. This study investigates the alterations in the pulmonary microbiota of HIV-positive and non-HIV patients following pneumocystis jirovecii infection.Collect bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from patients with HIV and non HIV infected Pneumocystis jirovecii, and compare the differences in pulmonary microbiota between the two groups.In total, 77 patients with pulmonary infection that had next generation sequencing performed on their bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and confirmed pneumocystis jirovecii infection were recruited in our study. Of the 77 patients with pneumocystis jirovecii infection, 52 were infected with HIV, and 25 were uninfected.Our findings indicate that HIV-positive patients exhibit a more diverse microbiota, predominantly characterized by viral co-infections. Specifically, 88.5% of HIV-positive patients experienced viral co-infections, primarily involving herpes viruses, followed by bacterial (61.5%) and fungal (40.4%) co-infections. In contrast, non-HIV patients predominantly exhibited bacterial co-infections (72%), followed by viral (52%) and fungal (36%) co-infections. By analyzing the next generation sequencing data of both groups, we identified statistically significant differences in viral infections (p < 0.001), while no significant differences were observed for bacterial or fungal infections. Furthermore, among the background bacteria detected via next generation sequencing in both patient groups, 22 microbial species were commonly present. Notably, Leptospiral virus, Rosette fungus, and Actinomycetes were detected at higher frequencies in HIV-infected pneumocystis jirovecii patients, with statistically significant differences.Through comparing the pulmonary microbiota profiles of HIV-positive and non-HIV patients post-pneumocystis jirovecii infection, we uncovered distinct differences between the two groups, which may hold implications for guiding subsequent treatment strategies and improving clinical outcomes.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Anderer S (2025)

Sugary Drinks May Influence Depression Through Gut Microbiome.

JAMA pii:2840180 [Epub ahead of print].

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Anderer S (2025)

Oral Microbiome Composition Linked to Pancreatic Cancer Risk.

JAMA pii:2840177 [Epub ahead of print].

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Amani A, Koroupi K, Langarizadeh MA, et al (2025)

Exploring the Therapeutic Potential of Diverse Bacterial Strains for Management of Periodontal Diseases.

Probiotics and antimicrobial proteins [Epub ahead of print].

Periodontal diseases, including gingivitis and periodontitis, are among the most prevalent oral health problems worldwide and are associated with chronic inflammation and tooth loss. Increasing attention has been directed toward the role of the human microbiota, particularly the oral microbiota, in influencing periodontal health and disease. This manuscript presents a narrative review that synthesizes and critically evaluates the available evidence on the therapeutic potential of diverse bacterial strains, with special emphasis on probiotics, as adjunctive agents in the management of periodontal disease. Literature was identified through searches of PubMed and Google Scholar, with priority given to more recent studies. The review discusses host-microbiota interactions, oral microbiome characteristics, immunomodulatory effects of probiotics, and strain-specific outcomes related to periodontal indices. While a number of bacterial strains, including Lactobacillus reuteri, Lactobacillus rhamnosus, Bifidobacterium, and selected Streptococcus species, demonstrate potential benefits in reducing plaque accumulation, inflammation, and clinical attachment loss, the findings across studies remain heterogeneous. Overall, probiotics and related microbial strategies represent a promising adjunct to conventional periodontal therapies; however, more standardized and long-term clinical trials are required before firm conclusions can be drawn.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Wasim R (2025)

The gut immune axis in ulcerative colitis: insights from microbiome research.

Molecular biology reports, 52(1):1006.

Ulcerative colitis (UC) is a chronic, recurrent inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) marked by inflammation of the colonic mucosa. While its precise aetiology remains unclear, emerging evidence underscores the pivotal role of gut microbiota in UC pathogenesis. In healthy individuals, the gut microbiota contributes to immune modulation, nutrient absorption, and maintenance of intestinal barrier integrity. In contrast, individuals with UC exhibit gut dysbiosis-characterized by a reduction in beneficial bacteria such as Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Bifidobacterium, and an increase in potentially pathogenic microbes like Escherichia coli. This microbial imbalance disrupts mucosal homeostasis, promotes persistent inflammation, and impairs epithelial healing. Contributing factors include genetic predisposition, antibiotic exposure, diet, and environmental influences. Novel microbiota-targeted interventions-such as probiotics, prebiotics, dietary modifications, and faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT)-are being actively explored, with promising preliminary outcomes in symptom relief and microbiome restoration. However, challenges persist in defining a "healthy" microbiome and standardizing therapeutic protocols. This study highlights the potential of microbiome modulation as a transformative approach in UC management and calls for further research into host-microbe interactions to advance precision-based, microbiota-oriented therapies.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Ikarashi N, Kon R, Sakai H, et al (2025)

Role of the gut microbiota in the pharmacological effects of traditional Kampo medicine and natural products.

Journal of natural medicines [Epub ahead of print].

The human gastrointestinal tract harbors over a thousand coexisting bacterial species that together constitute a highly complex intestinal microbiome. Dysbiosis of this microbial ecosystem has been implicated in the pathogenesis of disorders such as ulcerative colitis and obesity and has driven the development of microbiota-targeted prevention and treatment strategies. Traditional Kampo medicines are used with the aim of restoring the balance of the whole body, having been developed and established uniquely in Japan based on traditional Chinese medicine with a history of over two millennia. Recent evidence has revealed that the gut microbiota plays critical roles in the pharmacological effects of traditional Kampo medicines. For example, the anti-obesity activity of Bofutsushosan has been linked to an increase in Akkermansia muciniphila. The laxative effect of Daiokanzoto is related to rheinanthrone, which is produced from sennoside A through the gut microbiota, and drugs and foods that can alter the gut microbiota change the laxative activity of Daiokanzoto. In recent years, clinical trials have been conducted to examine the relationship between changes in the gut microbiota and the pharmacological effects of Kampo medicines, and this relationship has come to the forefront. This review discusses the findings of basic and clinical research on the role of the gut microbiota in the pharmacological action of traditional Kampo medicines, focusing on Bofutsushosan, Daiokanzoto, Daikenchuto, and Hangeshashinto, and discusses future issues and prospects for research into these interactions.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Bautista J, Ojeda-Mosquera S, Altamirano-Colina A, et al (2025)

Bidirectional interactions between circadian rhythms and the gut microbiome.

Applied microbiology and biotechnology, 109(1):218.

Circadian rhythms are endogenous, near-24-h cycles that synchronize physiological and behavioral functions with environmental cues such as light/dark cycles and food intake. While the central pacemaker in the suprachiasmatic nucleus orchestrates these rhythms, peripheral clocks distributed across organs, including the gastrointestinal tract, exhibit autonomous oscillations that are crucial for local homeostasis. Concurrently, the gut microbiota undergoes diurnal fluctuations in composition and metabolic activity that are tightly coupled to host circadian mechanisms. Recent discoveries reveal a bidirectional relationship: host clocks influence microbial dynamics through feeding behavior, immune signaling, and epithelial renewal, whereas microbial metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and bile acids modulate circadian gene expression in peripheral tissues. Disruptions in circadian alignment, whether due to genetic mutations, lifestyle factors like shift work and irregular eating, or environmental perturbations, lead to microbial dysbiosis, metabolic dysfunction, inflammation, and heightened disease susceptibility. Conversely, altered microbiota rhythms can feed back into host systems, impairing metabolic control, immune responses, and neuroendocrine signaling. This reciprocal regulation extends to disease contexts, where circadian-microbiota misalignment contributes to obesity, type 2 diabetes, inflammatory bowel disease, and even neuropsychiatric disorders. This review synthesizes current insights into the molecular and physiological cross-talk between host circadian clocks and the gut microbiota. We discuss how temporal dynamics at the cellular, systemic, and microbial levels are integrated and how their disruption underlies pathogenesis. We further explore the potential of chronobiotics and chrononutrition, including time-restricted feeding (TRF) and bioactive dietary compounds, as emerging strategies to restore circadian-microbial synchrony and improve metabolic health. Understanding this intricate dialogue between host and microbiome may pave the way for personalized, time-based interventions to enhance healthspan and prevent disease occurrence or progression. KEY POINTS: • Circadian rhythms and microbiota form a bidirectional regulatory feedback loop. • Disruption of circadian-microbial synchrony drives metabolic and inflammatory disease. • Chrononutrition offers novel strategies to restore health via circadian-microbiota alignment.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Brennan C, Shaffer JP, Belda-Ferre P, et al (2025)

Streamlined extraction of nucleic acids and metabolites from low- and high-biomass samples using isopropanol and matrix tubes.

Microbiology spectrum [Epub ahead of print].

UNLABELLED: An essential aspect of population-based research is collecting samples outside of a clinical setting. This is crucial because microbial populations are highly dynamic, varying significantly across hosts, environments, and time points, a variability that clinical sample collection alone cannot fully capture. At-home sample collection enables the inclusion of a larger and more diverse group of participants, accounting for differences in ethnicity, age, and other factors. However, managing large studies is challenging due to the complexities involved in sample acquisition, processing, and analysis. Building on our previous work demonstrating the effectiveness of single 1 mL barcoded, racked Matrix Tubes in reducing sample processing time and well-to-well contamination for paired DNA and metabolite extraction, we further validate this method against a previously benchmarked plate-based approach using the same extraction reagents. This validation focuses on samples from the built environment, human skin, human saliva, and feces from mice and humans. Importantly, we explore the impact of using a mix of bead sizes during bead-beating for cell lysis, demonstrating that it enhances taxonomic recovery compared to a single bead size. Finally, we assess the potential of 95% isopropanol for room-temperature sample preservation. Our results show that isopropanol performs comparably to 95% ethanol in many cases, suggesting it is viable as an alternative when ethanol is unavailable. Beyond minimizing contamination, halving processing time, eliminating human error during sample plating, and streamlining metadata curation, the Matrix tube approach produces metabolomic, 16S, and shotgun metagenomic data consistent with the Plate-based Method for both high- and low-biomass samples.

IMPORTANCE: Numerous studies have linked the microbiome to human and environmental health, yet many fundamental questions remain unanswered. Large-scale studies with robust statistical power are required to identify important covariates against a background of confounding factors. Cross-contamination, limited throughput, and human error have been identified as major setbacks when processing large numbers of samples. We present a streamlined method for sample accession and extraction of metabolites and DNA for both high- and low-biomass samples. This approach, previously shown to significantly reduce cross-contamination, employs an automation-friendly, single barcoded tube per sample. Additionally, we demonstrate that 95% isopropanol serves as an effective ambient-temperature storage solution for many sample types, providing an alternative in regions where ethanol is unavailable or restricted. This method has significant implications for the field, enabling large-scale studies to generate accurate insights with greater efficiency and expanded accessibility in situations in which ethanol is more costly or otherwise not available.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Rocha GR, Benoit DSW, AS Meyer (2025)

Reproducible 3D bioprinting of Streptococcus mutans to create model oral biofilms.

Microbiology spectrum [Epub ahead of print].

Novel approaches are needed to study relationships between oral biofilm strains, enable three-dimensional oral biofilm deposition, and hasten the rigor and pace of basic and translational biofilm studies. Previously, 3D-bioprinters were leveraged to deposit spatially patterned biofilms onto sugar-rich agar surfaces to study how the underlying spatial organization of various microbes impacts biofilm persistence and virulence. Herein, we have developed a new method to adapt this process from limited, soft agar surfaces to biomimetic solid substrates submerged in aqueous solutions for studying oral biofilms in vitro. Streptococcus mutans UA159 was used to compare standard in vitro biofilm development with our new 3D-printed bio-ink hydrogels on hydroxyapatite disks, which mimic tooth surfaces. Biofilms formed using the bio-ink methodology showed minimal quantitative differences in virulence factors, including environmental pH, biomass, and cell density, compared to biofilms formed using the standard in vitro methodology. The bio-ink technique resulted in higher exopolysaccharide deposition, a key virulence factor for biofilm cohesion and protection, as well as more homogeneous spatial distribution of bacterial microcolonies. Our newly developed technique produces 3D-printable model biofilms that match the virulence benchmarks of the standard method, opening possibilities to print biofilms onto any substrate and a new way to study multidimensional biofilm dynamics.IMPORTANCEDental caries is the most common oral disease caused by biofilms in humans with cost limitations. Changes in the human diet have increased the exposure to sugar-rich processed food, increasing the incidence and severity of dental caries and creating greater rationale for understanding biofilm deposition, microbial interactions, and maintenance of quiescence of the oral microbiota. Recent 3D-printing techniques have been leveraged to develop the first model biofilms, providing spatial control over microbe deposition and enabling unprecedented investigation of the impact of cell-cell interactions and spatial organizationupon biofilm persistence, sensitivity to drugs, and virulence. Here, we have developed new methods to extend bioprinting to oral biofilms using cariogenic Streptococcus mutans. Our technique is an attempt to establish an alternative method for oral biofilm formation in vitro that uses 3D-printing tools, preserving the virulence of standard in vitro biofilms while amplifying the availability and versatility of methods for understanding the microbiome.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Grodzka O, I Domitrz (2025)

Gut microbiota, probiotics, and migraine: a clinical review and meta-analysis.

Journal of oral & facial pain and headache, 39(3):13-26.

Migraine is a primary headache disorder affecting about 14% of the global population. The knowledge about migraine pathophysiology is increasing constantly; however, there are still many unknowns and uncertainties. Intestinal microbiota builds the gut environment together with metabolites and the immune system. Its connections with disorders outside the digestive system have been described, mainly neuropsychiatric diseases, due to the existence of the microbiota-gut-brain axis. Therefore, it is suggested that migraine is also correlated with changes in the microbiome. The review aimed to summarize the available literature related to the topic. We performed an electronic article search through the Embase Database and PubMed Database, and included 14 articles after analysis under the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) 2020 guidelines. Subsequently, a meta-analysis of randomized controlled clinical trials summarizing probiotics' effect on migraine prevention was conducted based on the same guidelines and resulted in including 2 adequate trials. Microbiome alterations have been observed in migraine patients with an influence on clinical presentation. Preclinical studies suggested a direct connection between migraine and microbiome changes. The meta-analysis has shown the influence of probiotics on migraine frequency (p = 0.003; Hedges' g = 1.22; standard error (SE) = 0.41), and no impact on migraine severity (p = 0.069; Hedges' g = 1.10; SE = 0.61) and attacks' duration (p = 0.149; Hedges' g = 0.18; SE = 0.15). However, the former was close to the statistical significance. The following work demonstrates a correlation between migraine and microbiome, which has a putative positive impact on migraine management. Moreover, probiotic supplementation can alleviate migraine symptoms. However, the main limitation is the limited number of studies, together with high heterogeneity and limited methodological consistency in the meta-analysis.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Li Q, Liu F, Zhong J, et al (2025)

Multi-cohort metagenomics reveals strain functional heterogeneity and demonstrates fecal microbial load correction improves colorectal cancer diagnostic models.

Frontiers in microbiology, 16:1656016.

INTRODUCTION: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is strongly associated with alterations in the gut microbiome. While numerous studies have examined this association, most focus on genus- or species-level taxonomic classifications, overlooking functional heterogeneity at the strain level.

METHODS: We integrated 1,123 metagenomic samples from seven global CRC cohorts to conduct multi-level metagenome-wide association studies (MWAS). Fecal microbial load (FML) correction was applied to mitigate technical confounding. We evaluated the performance of taxonomic models at various resolutions strain, species, and genus levels in classifying CRC status both within and across cohorts.

RESULTS: Strain-level analysis revealed conspecific strains with divergent associations to CRC. For instance, distinct strains of Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron exhibited both protective and risk-increasing effects across different cohorts. Genomic functional annotation suggested potential mechanistic bases for these opposing roles. Correction for FML reduced confounding and significantly improved the performance of within-cohort and cross-cohort CRC classification models. Interestingly, genus- and species-level models demonstrated superior predictive robustness compared to strain-level models, likely due to higher microbial abundance and greater cross-population conservation at these taxonomic ranks.

CONCLUSION: Our study underscores the biological relevance of strain level analysis in elucidating functional diversity within the microbiome. However, higher taxonomic levels provide more robust and clinically translatable diagnostic markers for CRC. Integrating FML correction with multi-level taxonomic profiling enhances both mechanistic insight into microbiom CRC interactions and the generalizability of diagnostic models across diverse populations.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Wang A, Chen T, Zhang H, et al (2025)

Mechanistic study of Jiawei Zicao Plaster in atopic dermatitis via IL-17 signaling pathway and skin microbiome modulation.

Frontiers in microbiology, 16:1668089.

BACKGROUND: Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a prevalent and difficult-to-cure chronic inflammatory skin condition. The mechanism of Jiawei Zicao Plaster (JZP), a clinically used Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) for AD, remains incompletely understood.

METHODS: Following successful model induction, JZP was topically applied to the dorsal skin of mice. Therapeutic efficacy was evaluated through histopathological examination of skin sections and quantification of inflammatory biomarkers using ELISA. To investigate the underlying mechanisms, we performed qRT-PCR to analyze gene expression in related signal pathway, along with 16S rRNA sequencing to characterize skin microbiota composition.

RESULTS: Network pharmacological analysis revealed that JZP may exert therapeutic effects by targeting antibacterial and anti-inflammatory pathways. Subsequent in vivo experiments demonstrated that JZP effectively ameliorates biochemical markers of AD by activating the IL-17 pathway. Analysis of skin microbiota indicated that JZP treatment led to an increase in Chryseobacterium abundance and a decrease in Staphylococcus abundance.

CONCLUSION: This study seeks to validate the efficacy of JPZ as a treatment for AD. Initial findings suggest that JPZ attains its therapeutic efficacy through the synergistic actions of IL-17 and antibacterial properties, providing a theoretical basis for the future development and application of this traditional Chinese medicine formula.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Long C, Fu X, Wu Q, et al (2025)

Poncirus trifoliata vs. Citrus junos rootstocks: reshaping lemon rhizosphere microecology through microbial and metabolic reprogramming.

Frontiers in microbiology, 16:1650631.

INTRODUCTION: Trifoliate orange (Poncirus trifoliataL. Raf) and "Ziyang Xiangcheng" (Citrus junos Sieb. ex Tanaka) are the predominant rootstocks for lemon production in China, exhibiting distinct adaptations to soil pH and differential impacts on plant resilience. As pivotal mediators of scion-soil interactions, rootstocks have emerged as key research targets for their regulatory potential in rhizosphere microbial communities and metabolites.

METHODS: Pot-cultured systems were established with lemon (Citrus × limon "Eureka") saplings grafted onto trifoliate orange (PTL) and "Ziyang Xiangcheng" (CJL) rootstocks. Integrated metagenomic and GC-MS metabolomic approaches were employed to analyze rhizosphere microbial communities and metabolites.

RESULTS: The results demonstrated no significant difference in rhizospheric microbial α-diversity (richness) between PTL and CJL, although PTL exhibited higher evenness. β-Diversity and LEfSe analysis revealed significant structural divergence in communities. A total of 15 differentially enriched genera across three phyla were identified, among which Pseudomonas, Cupriavidus, and Burkholderia in CJL, along with Sphingobium in PTL, exhibited strong effects. Random forest modeling identified 15 key differential metabolites, with 4 significantly upregulated in CJL and 11 in PTL. Microbial-metabolite correlation and GSEA analysis uncovered 10 core pathways involving genetic information processing, energy metabolism, environmental adaptation, and disease resistance mechanisms. Soil analysis showed CJL significantly surpassed PTL in organic matter content, catalase activity and plant height, whereas PTL exhibited superior cellulase, sucrase and urease activities. Mechanistically, PTL appears to recruit Pseudomonas mediterranea via 1-Monostearin secretion to activate glycerolipid metabolism, enhancing drought tolerance. Its caffeate and salicyl alcohol-β-glucoside secretions potentially mobilize Sphingobium and Ensifer adhaerens to regulate amino sugar metabolism, promoting carbon sequestration and root defense. Conversely, CJL likely employs L-alanine exudation to recruit Pseudomonas putida, triggering exopolysaccharide biosynthesis through arginine-proline metabolism as a key tolerance mechanism (such as drought tolerance and alkali tolerance).

DISCUSSION: The findings elucidate rootstock-specific modulation of rhizosphere microecosystems, highlighting distinct microbial-metabolite interactions and tolerance mechanisms. These results provide theoretical support for precision rootstock selection and microbiome engineering to advance sustainable citrus production.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Li F, Kong X, Khan MZ, et al (2025)

Gut microbiome regulation in equine animals: current understanding and future perspectives.

Frontiers in microbiology, 16:1602258.

The equine intestinal microbiome represents a complex and dynamic ecosystem that fundamentally influences host health and physiological function. This microbial community exhibits distinct compositional and functional variations across different anatomical segments of the intestinal tract, with diversity and abundance patterns shaped by host genetics, dietary inputs, and environmental conditions. The resident microbiota performs essential functions in feed fermentation, nutrient metabolism, pathogen exclusion, and immunological programming. This review synthesizes current knowledge regarding the core taxonomic and functional attributes of the equine intestinal microbiome, examining interspecies variation and conservation patterns. We evaluate key determinants of microbial community assembly and regulation, while examining mechanistic links between microbiota composition and host health outcomes. Through critical analysis of existing literature, this work provides an integrated framework for understanding the equine gut microbiome, with implications for clinical intervention strategies and evidence-based approaches to promote intestinal health in equine.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Liu Y, Li Y, J Li (2025)

Integrative analysis of serum microorganisms and serum metabolomics in osteoporosis patients based on 16S rDNA sequencing and UHPLC/MS-based metabolomics.

Frontiers in medicine, 12:1664359.

INTRODUCTION: Although significant progress has been made in the treatment and research of osteoporosis patients in recent years, the genetic mechanism of osteoporosis has not yet been fully elucidated.

METHODS: We conducted a comprehensive analysis using 16S sequencing and UHPLC-MS/MS metabolomics data to characterize the microbial composition and metabolic composition in the serum of osteoporosis patients.

RESULTS: At the phylum level, Proteobacteria are mainly present in Osteoporosis; In Normal, it is mainly Bacteroidota. At the genus level, Cupriavidus is the main species in Osteoporosis; In Normal, the main ones are Blautia, Bacteroides, Alcaligenes and Pseudomonas. Serum metabolomics revealed different metabolites (230 significantly differentially expressed metabolites) and lipid metabolism pathways (such as Glycerophospholipid metabolism) among the two groups. The combined serum microbiota and serum metabolomics datasets demonstrate a correlation reflecting the impact of microbiota on metabolic activity (p < 0.05).

DISCUSSION: Our research findings indicate that microbiota and metabolomics analysis provide important candidate biomarkers. The correlation between these serum microbiota and host metabolism is of great significance for optimizing early diagnosis and developing personalized treatment strategies. This study elucidates the relationship between serum microbiota and metabolites in osteoporosis.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Jia D, S Xue (2025)

Mediterranean diet research trajectories in China (2006-2025): a scoping review and scientometric analysis to localize global nutrition models.

Frontiers in nutrition, 12:1661835.

BACKGROUND: Mediterranean-diet (MedDiet) principles are increasingly invoked to counter China's nutrition-transition-driven epidemic of cardiometabolic disease, yet no field-wide synthesis of this scholarship exists. A bibliometric assessment can expose thematic evolution, knowledge gaps and localization pathways.

METHODS: We systematically searched Web of Science Core Collection and CNKI for Chinese-affiliated MedDiet human-health articles published between 2006 and 2 February 2025. After PRISMA-ScR screening we retained 384 records. VOSviewer and COOC mapped co-authorship, citations and keywords; latent-Dirichlet allocation detected topic drift; compound annual growth rate (CAGR) and field-weighted citation impact (FWCI) indexed performance. All data and scripts are openly archived.

RESULTS: Annual output climbed from one article in 2006 to 76 in 2022 (CAGR = 23%); FWCI = 1.34. Seven keyword clusters now pivot on gut-microbiome science, digital adherence and sustainability rather than early cardiometabolic replication. Temporal segmentation revealed three phases: replication (2006-2013), public-health expansion (2014-2019) and cross-disciplinary innovation (2020-2025). Bibliographic coupling resolved five citation schools; Jiangnan-diet localization has migrated into the leading clinical cluster. Lexical drift highlights ingredient substitution (rapeseed-oil phenolics) and late adoption of carbon-footprint terminology.

CONCLUSION: Chinese MedDiet scholarship is recalibrating toward a culturally adapted, digitally enabled and climate-aligned paradigm. Longer m-health-supported trials, life-course epidemiology and multi-omics Jiangnan cohorts are warranted to translate current bibliometric momentum into population-level health and sustainability gains.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

George C, Dharan HM, Drescher L, et al (2025)

Tropical intertidal microbiome response to the 2024 Marine Honour oil spill.

Environmental science and ecotechnology, 28:100623.

Marine fuel oil (MFO) spills in tropical coastal environments are under-characterized despite increasing risk from maritime activities. Microbial and geochemical responses to the June 2024 Marine Honour MFO spill on Singapore's intertidal sediments were analyzed in real time over 185 days. Using metagenomics and hydrocarbon profiling, microbial community shifts and hydrocarbon degradation were quantified across visibly oiled (high-impact) and clean (low-impact) sites. Microbiomes at all sites adapted rapidly to the spill through increased diversity and abundance of genes encoding alkane and aromatic compound degradation, detoxification, and biosurfactant production. The dominant hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria differed markedly from those reported in other crude oil spills and in regions with different climates. Oil deposition intensity strongly influenced microbial succession and hydrocarbon-degrading gene profiles, and this reflected early toxicity constraints in heavily oiled areas. The persistence of hydrocarbon degradation genes beyond hydrocarbon detection in sediments suggested long-term functional priming may occur. The study provides novel genome-resolved insight into the microbial response to MFO pollution, advances understanding of marine environmental biodegradation, and provides urgently needed baseline data for oil spill response strategies in Southeast Asia and beyond.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Tian C, Chang X, Wu J, et al (2025)

Research progress of intestinal microbiota on cognitive dysfunction after spinal cord injury.

iScience, 28(10):113554.

Alterations in the gut microbiota are among the most common phenomena following spinal cord injury, often accompanied by cognitive impairment. Numerous studies have reported intrinsic links among these three aspects. However, the molecular mechanisms by which the gut microbiota influence cognitive function after spinal cord injury, as well as strategies for modulating the gut microbiota to treat cognitive deficits, remain inadequately summarized. Therefore, this review provides a comprehensive summary of the key mechanisms by which gut dysbiosis contributes to cognitive impairment and discusses therapeutic strategies targeting the gut microbiota. These insights may offer a theoretical basis for further research and microbiota-based drug development for cognitive dysfunction following spinal cord injury.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Burakova I, Smirnova Y, Gryaznova M, et al (2025)

Effect of interferon on broilers' fecal microbiome composition.

Journal of advanced veterinary and animal research, 12(2):487-496.

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of our study was to investigate the effect of chicken interferon on the intestinal microbiota of broiler chickens.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study used next-generation sequencing on the Ion Torrent pragmatic general multicast platform to target the V3 16S ribosomal ribonucleic acid hypervariable region gene, allowing us to analyze in detail changes in the composition of the broiler chicken microbiome.

RESULTS: Forty-one bacterial genera were identified in the studied groups of broilers. The highest abundance in both groups was observed for Lactobacillus, which was 31.08% ± 6.52 in the control group and 36.08% ± 7.25 in the interferon group. There was no clustering between the microbiome communities of the groups studied. We found a decrease or complete absence of Escherichia-Shigella, Eubacterium fissicatena group, Lachnospiraceae CHKCI001, and Pediococcus in the interferon-treated broiler group compared to the control group and an increase in the number of genera Ruminococcaceae CAG-352 and Turicibacter in the interferon group.

CONCLUSION: A decrease in E.-Shigella may indicate normalization of the intestinal microbiota of broilers, and it can also be concluded that the introduction of interferon helps to suppress opportunistic bacteria. In the interferon group, a sharp increase in the number of Turicibacter was observed. Representatives of this genus are among the most common members in the intestines of broilers.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Cai Y, Wu L, Brandt BW, et al (2025)

Streptococcus cristatus reduces cariogenicity of saliva-derived microcosms under pH-dependent conditions.

Journal of oral microbiology, 17(1):2565450.

BACKGROUND: The study aims to investigate Streptococcus cristatus, an oral commensal bacterium, as a probiotic for dental caries prevention by modulating the oral microbiome.

METHODS: Saliva from four healthy donors was used to establish 24-h microcosm biofilms in an in vitro 96-well peg model. The preformed biofilms were then exposed to biofilm medium containing 0.2% sucrose (BM), with or without S. cristatus. They were grown for 48 h under two conditions: a constant pH-neutral regime (BM supplemented with 76 mM K2HPO4 and 15 mM KH2PO4, pH 7.0) or cariogenic pH-cycling regime (8 h pH-neutral and 16 h in BM containing 100 mM acetic acid, pH 5.5). Phosphate and acetate buffers were used to control pH. After 72 h, the biofilms were analyzed for biomass, lactic acid production, hydrogen peroxide (HP) concentrations, and microbial composition via 16S rRNA gene sequencing.

RESULTS: S. cristatus successfully integrated into 24-h preformed microcosm biofilms derived from individual saliva. Under pH-neutral conditions, it reduced biofilm biomass and lactate production while increasing hydrogen peroxide (HP) generation in a donor-dependent manner. Conversely, under cariogenic pH-cycling conditions, these inhibitory effects on biomass and lactate production were consistent across all donors, although HP was undetectable. Microbiome analysis revealed that S. cristatus increased species richness and mitigated the compositional shifts caused by pH-cycling. This was achieved by inhibiting Streptococcus salivarius/vestibularis across all donors, while promoting Streptococcus mitis group and Streptococcus anginosus in a donor-dependent manner.

CONCLUSIONS: S. cristatus represents a promising microbiome modulator with the potential to substantially mitigate the cariogenicity of oral microcosms.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Li K, Liu T, Zhong X, et al (2025)

High-risk Sexual Behavior for HIV Acquisition is Associated with Gut Microbial Community in Men Who Have Sex with Men.

Open forum infectious diseases, 12(10):ofaf581.

BACKGROUND: Gut dysbiosis is observed in men who have sex with men compared with men who have sex with women. However, the association between risk of HIV acquisition and gut microbiota in HIV sero-negative men who have sex with men remains unclear.

METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study in HIV sero-negative men who have sex with men to explore the links between gut microbiota and risk of HIV acquisition. HIV sero-negative men who have sex with men were recruited. Fecal samples were collected for gut microbiota analysis using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. HIV risk assessment tool was used to estimate the risk of HIV acquisition. Latent class analysis was performed to categorize participants into different risk levels. Gut microbiota diversity was analyzed using the R package vegan. Linear discriminant analysis was used to analyze differential taxa between groups.

RESULTS: Two independent subgroups were identified. High-risk participants had >2 male partners and mostly engaged in receptive anal intercourse. The high-risk group exhibited significantly higher Shannon index and lower Simpson index, indicating increased gut microbiota diversity. Beta diversity analysis showed significant differences between the high-risk and low-risk groups (F = 2.0245, P = .0369). Linear discriminant analysis revealed differences in the relative abundance of multiple microbial taxa between the 2 groups, with Barnesiella significantly increased in the low-risk group and Roseburia higher in the high-risk group.

CONCLUSIONS: Risk of HIV acquisition in men who have sex with men is associated with gut dysbiosis, suggesting that gut microbiota may be a potential target for HIV prevention strategies.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Zhao T, Sun N, Ding J, et al (2026)

The specific hallmarks, emerging roles, key mechanisms, and clinical applications of intra-tumoral microbiota in human cancers.

Genes & diseases, 13(1):101733.

Intra-tumoral microbes have been revealed to exist in many cancer types, attracting widespread attention. The significance of intra-tumoral microbes is becoming increasingly apparent in various aspects of human cancers, encompassing cancer initiation, progression, metastasis, diagnostic approaches, prognostic evaluations, and therapeutic interventions. Despite the considerable focus dedicated to this topic by numerous scholars, a comprehensive analysis of intra-tumoral microbiota is still lacking in human cancers. Especially, identifying specific microbial hallmarks in the occurrence and development of cancer and different cancers remains the central task for investigators. This review focuses on the identification and analysis of distinct attributes and noteworthy characteristics exhibited by intra-tumoral microbiota across various types of cancer. The potential mechanisms of intra-tumoral microbiota action, as well as the significance of the microbiome in the diagnosis and prognosis of cancer, are systematically summarized. The capacity of intra-tumoral microbes to regulate cancer treatment with a focus on the relevant microbial species, and the possibility of targeting the microbiota to improve treatment effectiveness while preventing toxicity, are specifically highlighted. Lastly, the challenges, limitations, and prospects of intra-tumoral microbes in further study and clinical application, including prognostic, diagnostic, and therapeutic applications, are discussed in cancers. This review provides a systematic summary of the specific characteristics, molecular mechanisms, therapeutic effects, and diagnostic and prognostic values of intra-tumoral microbiota in different cancers, which will help improve the diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of tumor patients and offer new ideas for achieving precise treatment of cancer with intra-tumoral microbiota.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Jiang W, S Gu (2025)

Editorial: The oral microbiome and its impact on systemic health: from disease development to biomaterials development.

Frontiers in cellular and infection microbiology, 15:1697069.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Sun G, Li Z, Wang G, et al (2025)

Infestation by potato tuber moth restructures microbial communities in flue-cured tobacco rhizosphere and non-rhizosphere soils.

Frontiers in plant science, 16:1670207.

INTRODUCTION: The rhizosphere microbiota is associated with the plant response to phytophagous pest infestation through the plant-rhizosphere microbe axis. However, the responses of microbial community characteristics of flue-cured tobacco rhizosphere and non-rhizosphere soil to potato tuber moth (PTM) Phthorimaea operculella larval feeding is unclear.

METHODS: In this study, the microbial structural composition was analysed in the rhizosphere and non-rhizosphere soil of healthy and PTM infested flue-cured tobacco plants at the vigorous growth stage collected from the field (with four replicates per group) using Illumina MiSeq sequencing. The featured microbes, co-occurrence networks, and potential functions of tobacco rhizosphere and non-rhizosphere soil microbial communities were analysed.

RESULTS: Amplicon data analyses showed that PTM infestation altered the microbial community composition in tobacco rhizosphere and non-rhizosphere and this alteration was similar between these two soil types. PTM infested plants showed enrichment of distinct microbial genera. For instance, the rhizosphere soil showed increased abundances of Gemmatimonas (bacteria) and Humicola (fungi), while the non-rhizosphere soil was enriched with Streptomyces (bacteria) and Penicillium (fungi). In contrast, the rhizosphere of healthy plants were characterized by enrichment of Gaiella (bacteria) and Trichoderma, Talaromyces (fungi), along with the non-rhizosphere soil dominated by Sphingomonas (bacteria) and Cordana (fungi). Furthermore, PTM infestation altered the potential functions of flue-cured tobacco rhizosphere and non-rhizosphere soils, and reduced the complexity of rhizosphere bacterial and fungal communities, as well as the non-rhizosphere fungal community. Notable changes were observed in bacterial metabolic pathways and significantly up-regulated the function of symbiotroph of fungi (Lichenized) (P < 0.05).

DISCUSSION: Together, these results enhance our understanding of how the underground microbiome of flue-cured tobacco responds to aboveground phytophagous insect (PTM) infestation, providing valuable insights that could facilitate translation into more effective PTM management practices.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Bziuk N, Wassermann B, Bickel S, et al (2025)

Aureobasidium pullulans: a microbiome-based perspective from global biomes to edible plant tissues.

Frontiers in plant science, 16:1652366.

Aureobasidium pullulans is a globally distributed fungus commonly found in plant-associated and anthropogenic environments. Known for its antagonistic activity against plant pathogens, it is widely used as a biocontrol agent in sustainable agriculture. Despite its prevalence in edible plant tissues and frequent environmental exposure, its broader role within microbiomes and potential relevance for human health remain underexplored. In this perspective article, we highlight the global distribution of A. pullulans based on publicly available sequencing data and examine its ecological function from a microbiome-based viewpoint. Our synthesis supports the view of A. pullulans as a safe, plant-beneficial symbiont with high value for sustainable crop protection and potential relevance for the One Health framework. Future microbiome research should further explore its functional roles within plant and human-associated microbiomes to better harness its benefits while ensuring biosafety across ecosystems.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Tettevi EJ, Simpong DL, Maina M, et al (2025)

Antibiotic-Induced Gut Dysbiosis Modulates Alzheimer's Disease-Associated Gene Expression and Protein Aggregation in 3xTg-AD Mice via the Gut-Brain Axis.

Brain and behavior, 15(10):e70946.

INTRODUCTION: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder that poses a major global health challenge due to its increasing prevalence and lack of effective treatments. Emerging evidence suggests the gut-brain axis may play a pivotal role in AD pathogenesis. However, causal links between dysbiosis and late-stage AD pathology remain unclear.

METHODS: This study evaluated the effects of antibiotic-induced gut dysbiosis in aged 3xTg-AD mice (46-48 weeks). Female mice were randomly assigned to control or treatment groups and administered a broad-spectrum antibiotic cocktail (ampicillin, vancomycin, and neomycin) for 14 days. Behavioral tests (Y-maze, elevated plus maze) were performed to assess cognitive and anxiety-like behaviors. Gut microbiota composition was assessed via 16S rRNA qPCR. Gene expression of Acetylcholinesterase (AChE), Butyrylcholinesterase (BChE), and Tumor Necrosis Factor-Alpha (TNF-α) was analyzed via qRT-PCR, and cerebral amyloid-β1-42 and tau protein levels were quantified by ELISA.

RESULTS: Antibiotic treatment induced significant dysbiosis, with > 90% reduction in Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes. Dysbiotic mice displayed impaired spatial working memory, heightened anxiety-like behavior, and reduced locomotor activity. Molecular analyses revealed region-specific dysregulation of cholinergic genes: AChE was upregulated in the hippocampus but downregulated in the cortex, while BChE showed the opposite trend. TNF-α was significantly elevated in both regions, indicating neuroinflammation. Dysbiosis also led to increased brain levels of amyloid-β1-42 and tau.

CONCLUSION: Gut microbiome disruption exacerbates late-stage AD pathology, driving cognitive deficits, neuroinflammation, and hallmark protein aggregation. These findings support the gut-brain axis as a critical modulator of AD and highlight the microbiome as a potential therapeutic target.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

de Campos Costa MA, Zhao X, Komura D, et al (2025)

New high-specificity fibers with strong and consistent responses across individuals.

Food & function [Epub ahead of print].

Individual variability in gut microbiota responses limits the consistency of health benefits from prebiotic fiber interventions. Building on our concept of fiber hierarchical specificity, defined as the selective alignment and use of fibers by a narrow subset of gut microbes, we evaluated new putative high-specificity fibers for their ability to promote predictable and intense microbial shifts across individuals. Here, six candidate fibers (Acacia gum, Fucogalactan, Gellan gum, Guar gum, Locust bean gum, and Xylooligosaccharides) were tested in vitro using fecal microbiota from ten donors and compared to low-specificity (Fructooligosaccharides) and high-specificity (an insoluble glucan) reference fibers. SCFA analysis showed that Fucogalactan and Guar were strongly propiogenic, while Acacia and Locust promoted balanced SCFA production. Gellan exhibited minimal fermentability. Acacia, Fucogalactan, Guar, and Locust consistently enriched putative beneficial genera (Eisenbergiella, Hungatella, Anaerotruncus, and Parabacteroides, respectively), with strong and consistent responses across individuals, features characteristic of high-specificity fibers. In contrast, Fructooligosaccharides and Xylooligosaccharides produced more variable, and less intense responses. Our findings support Acacia, Fucogalactan, Guar, and Locust as high-specificity fibers that induce consistent, taxon-targeted shifts in the gut microbiome. These expand the repertoire of high-specificity fibers-a promising prebiotic approach for predictable microbiota modulation and related health outcomes.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Mohamed Mojahed Eladly MAE, Morsy HE, Elnabrawy IMS, et al (2025)

Gut microbiome Lactobacillus acidophilus and its relationship with thyroid nodules and thyroid hormonal profile.

Endokrynologia Polska, 76(5):499-506.

INTRODUCTION: Thyroid diseases are often associated with the amounts and functioning of thyroid hormones, which may have an impact on the makeup of gut microbiomes. Multiple studies have shown a correlation between gut microbiota and both Graves' disease and Hashimoto's thyroiditis. However, there is no proven link between the gut microbiota and thyroid nodules. Researchers will examine the correlation between Lactobacillus acidophilus and thyroid nodules and hormones.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: This work is a prospective case-control investigation undertaken from 2021 to 2022 at endocrine clinics situated at Ain Shams University in Cairo. A total of 90 participants, 30 as a control group (group C), 30 patients with benign thyroid nodules (group A), and 30 patients with malignant thyroid nodules (group B) participated in the study. Measurements of hormonal profile, serum selenium, zinc, thyroglobulin, thyroid peroxidase antibody (anti-TPO), and stool polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for Lactobacillus acidophilus levels were made in all groups.

RESULTS: The cycle threshold (CT) at which lactobacilli PCR was expressed in group A was 32.340 ± 5.025 while in group B it was 34.957 ± 5.834 and in group C it was 27.530 ± 5.834, p < 0.001. There was highly significant variation between the studied groups.

CONCLUSION: The stool count of Lactobacillus acidophilus PCR showed a significant difference across the groups under study.

RevDate: 2025-10-10

Koketsu A, Fukase S, Tamahara T, et al (2025)

Bacterial Involvement in Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma and Potentially Malignant Oral Disorders.

Oral diseases [Epub ahead of print].

OBJECTIVE: To clarify the relationship between oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), potentially malignant oral disease (OPMD), and bacterial flora using metagenomic analysis.

METHODS: This cross-sectional observational study included 50 patients in the control group and 77 patients with OPMDs, 41 with early OSCCs, and 20 with advanced OSCCs. Patient saliva samples were subjected to high-throughput sequencing of 16S rRNA gene amplicons to evaluate the composition and diversity of the oral microbiome.

RESULTS: No significant differences were observed in patient backgrounds, other than sex. Patients with advanced OSCCs had greater oral bacterial diversity than those with early OSCC or OPMD. The advanced OSCC group formed a distinct cluster separate from the other groups. Sixteen and 275 species were identified at the phylum and genus levels, respectively. Compared with the control group, Actinomycetia and Streptococcus were significantly elevated in the early OSCC and OPMD groups. Peptostreptococcus and Fusobacterium were significantly higher in the advanced OSCC group than in the control, OPMD, and early OSCC groups.

CONCLUSIONS: The composition and diversity of oral microbiota may be associated with OPMD development and progression to OSCC. Consequently, the salivary microbiome may serve as a biomarker for oral cancer and help predict cancer progression.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Xu J, Chen X, Ren J, et al (2025)

Multi-omics insights into microbiome-rumen epithelium interaction mechanisms underlying subacute rumen acidosis tolerance in dairy goats.

Genome biology, 26(1):345.

BACKGROUND: To address rising demand for dairy products, dairy goats are often fed high-concentrate diets, which lead to subacute rumen acidosis (SARA). The mechanisms behind individual variation in SARA tolerance are not well understood. This study aims to elucidate roles of rumen microbiome-host interactions in SARA-susceptibility and tolerance.

RESULTS: Goats susceptible or tolerant to SARA were selected by feeding diets with different levels of rumen degradable starch. SARA-susceptible goats present prolonged periods of rumen pH below 5.8 and volatile fatty acids (VFAs) accumulation. Metagenomic analysis reveals a decrease in cellulose- and hemicellulose-utilizing bacteria and enzymes, along with increased lysozymes, suggesting disrupted rumen homeostasis. Transcriptomic and single-nucleus transcriptome analyses reveal upregulated Th17 cells, IL-17 signalling, and inflammatory pathways in SARA-susceptible goats. In contrast, SARA-tolerant goats maintain stable pH levels and enhance VFAs absorption. Bifidobacterium adolescentis and other beneficial bacteria are enriched in the rumen of SARA-tolerant goats. These microbes are positively correlated with 3-methyl pyruvic acid, a key metabolite involved in branched-chain amino acid synthesis and epithelial cell proliferation. Both microbiome transplantation and B. adolescentis direct feeding experiments confirm the protective effects of SARA-tolerant microbiota including B. adolescentis, promoting rumen epithelial VFAs absorption and reducing ruminal inflammation.

CONCLUSIONS: This study highlights the importance of Th17-mediated immune responses in ruminal inflammation and the role of B. adolescentis in regulating rumen epithelial VFAs absorption. Modulating VFAs absorption in the rumen epithelium represents a promising strategy for improving animal health and enhancing rumen fermentation efficiency.

RevDate: 2025-10-10
CmpDate: 2025-10-10

Shtossel O, Y Louzoun (2025)

GIMIC: smoothed graph-image representation of microbiome samples induce an optimal distance.

Genome biology, 26(1):350.

An essential tool in microbiome is the distance between samples. This serves to detect groups of similar samples. We have recently shown that combining the cladogram with the abundance of each microbe into a sorted normalized abundance tree can improve the accuracy of machine learning and differential analysis. We show that smoothing these tree-based images to produce GIMIC (Smoothed Graph IMages of the MICrobiome) leads to an interpretable visualization of microbiome sets and that the difference between the smoothed tree-based images is a better metric than the current state-of-the-art in a wide array of tasks.

RevDate: 2025-10-09
CmpDate: 2025-10-09

Shin AS, Xing Y, Waseem MR, et al (2025)

Microbiota and short chain fatty acid relationships underlie clinical heterogeneity and identify key microbial targets in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).

Scientific reports, 15(1):35375.

Short chain fatty acids (SCFA) are key microbial metabolites that modulate intestinal homeostasis and may influence irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) pathophysiology. We aimed to assess microbial features associated with SCFA and determine if features varied across IBS subtypes and endophenotypes. We analyzed stool microbial metagenomes, stool SCFA, and measurable IBS traits (stool bile acids, colonic transit, stool form) in 41 patients with IBS (IBS with constipation [IBS-C] IBS with diarrhea [IBS-D]) and 17 healthy controls. We used partial canonical correspondence analyses (pCCA), conditioned on transit, to quantify microbe-SCFA associations across groups. We further compared gut microbiome-encoded potential for substrate utilization across groups and within a subset of participants selected by their stool characteristics as well as stool microbiomes of patients with and without clinical bile acid malabsorption (BAM). Microbe-SCFA associations differed across groups and revealed key taxa including Dorea sp. CAG:317 and Bifidobacterium pseudocatenulatum in IBS-D and Akkermansia muciniphila and Prevotella copri in IBS-C that that could underlie subtype-specific microbially-mediated mechanisms. The greatest number of microbe-SCFA associations were observed in IBS-D. Several SCFA-producing species demonstrated inverse correlations with SCFA. Fewer bacterial taxa were associated with acetate to butyrate ratios in IBS compared to health. In participants selected by stool form, we demonstrated differential abundances of microbial genes/pathways for SCFA metabolism and degradation of carbohydrates and mucin across groups. SCFA-producing taxa were reduced in IBS-D patients with BAM. Keystone taxa responsible for SCFA production differ by IBS subtype and traits. IBS microbiomes appear exhibit reduced functional redundancy. Differences in substrate preferences are also linked to bowel functions. Focusing on taxa that drive SCFA profiles and stool form may be a rational strategy for identifying relevant microbial targets in IBS.

RevDate: 2025-10-09
CmpDate: 2025-10-09

Gabrilska RA, Omeir K, Ancira J, et al (2025)

Functionally enriched human polymorphisms associate to species in the chronic wound microbiome.

NPJ biofilms and microbiomes, 11(1):194.

Chronic wounds are a burden to millions of patients worldwide and impaired wound closure has been shown to be associated with wound microbiota. Recent evidence suggests human genetics may shape differences in composition of wound microbiomes. Here, a microbiome genome-wide association study was used to test effects of human genetics on the relative abundances of bacterial species in chronic wounds. Sixteen species were associated with 193 genetic loci distributed across 25 non-overlapping genomic regions, with per-species heritability estimates ranging up to 20%. Functional analyses on genomic regions and species resulted in overrepresentation of pathways relevant to microbial infection and wound healing. Species associated with host genetics exhibited co-occurrence relationships with common wound pathogens including Staphylococcus aureus. Moreover, the genetic distance among patients was significantly related to differences in their overall wound microbiome composition. Identification of genetic biomarkers reveals predictive risk factors and new mechanistic insight for chronic wounds.

RevDate: 2025-10-09

Taubenheim J, Kadibalban AS, Zimmermann J, et al (2025)

Author Correction: Metabolic modeling reveals a multi-level deregulation of host-microbiome metabolic networks in IBD.

Nature communications, 16(1):8978 pii:10.1038/s41467-025-64877-y.

RevDate: 2025-10-09
CmpDate: 2025-10-09

Liu S, Feng B, Zhang Z, et al (2025)

UPGG: expanding the taxonomic and functional diversity of the pig gut microbiome with an enhanced genome catalog.

NPJ biofilms and microbiomes, 11(1):196.

The porcine gut microbiome is crucial for pig health and key to its production performance. However, genome-level analysis across multiple kingdoms remains limited. Here, we reconstructed the unified pig gastrointestinal genome (UPGG), including bacterial, archaeal, and annotated over 78 million non-redundant protein-coding genes using 5784 metagenome samples. We identified antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and mobile genetic elements (MGEs), and the distribution of 72,056 metabolic gene clusters within existing populations. We have constructed pan-genomes of 436 high-quality microbial species and, using these as references, discovered intraspecies genomic variations that revealed 23,350,975 single-nucleotide variants (SNVs). Finally, through comparative analysis of gut microbiome genomes conducted in this study, we observed that pigs may serve as a more suitable model than other animals for investigating human gut microbiota composition and functional patterns. In summary, we constructed a comprehensive reference catalog of the porcine gut microbiome and enhanced the understanding of the host-microbe coevolution.

RevDate: 2025-10-09

Tito RY, Obregon-Tito AJ, Meza-Sánchez G, et al (2025)

Navigating trust and science: microbiome research in the Amazon.

Trends in microbiology pii:S0966-842X(25)00250-1 [Epub ahead of print].

Including Indigenous Peoples in microbiome research is both a scientific imperative and an ethical responsibility. Our long-standing partnership with the Matsés Peoples from the Peruvian Amazon provided scientific insights in microbial profiles that have coevolved with humans, studies only possible via trust-based ethical partnerships. Community-based participatory research (CBPR) is essential to navigate mistrust rooted in historical injustices. We present our experience implementing culturally informed protocols and equitable benefit-sharing as cornerstones of respectful, inclusive microbiome research with Peruvian Indigenous Peoples. This approach fosters sustainable research partnerships grounded in reciprocal trust and mutual benefit.

RevDate: 2025-10-09

Garg PM, Konnikova L, Kallapur SG, et al (2025)

Does the duration of empiric antibiotic treatment influence NEC incidence and severity relative to placental pathology?.

Journal of neonatal-perinatal medicine [Epub ahead of print].

Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) remains a leading cause of mortality in preterm infants. Studies show that exposure to chorioamnionitis is associated with increased rate of NEC. The influence of the early antibiotic exposure provides contrasting findings, with a few studies demonstrating an increased risk of NEC with prenatal and postnatal antibiotic treatment, and others showing a decreased NEC risk. Far fewer reports delineate the impact of the duration of early antibiotics or the potential confounding of antibiotics by placental pathology on incidence of NEC. The provision of antibiotics following birth is associated with increased risk of NEC secondary to changes in the gut microbiome, intestinal epithelium maturation, and the intestinal barrier function. This report presents current evidence about the clinical impact of intrauterine environment and postnatal antibiotic exposure on the intestinal injury in preterm infants. We present information from our own research in conjunction with information collected from an extensive search in the databases PubMed, EMBASE, and Scopus. Both translational and prospective clinical studies are needed to fully understand the combined impact of placental pathology and postnatal antibiotic exposure on the neonatal morbidities and mortality.

RevDate: 2025-10-09

Mahesh S, Rajesh V, Shetty V, et al (2025)

Temporal Burden of WHO Critical-Priority Enterobacteriaceae in the Infant Gut During Early Life influenced by Maternal Postpartum Antibiotic Exposure.

Indian journal of medical microbiology pii:S0255-0857(25)00212-9 [Epub ahead of print].

PURPOSE: Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in the gut microbiome progressively evolves during infancy. This study aimed to evaluate the prevalence of WHO Critical Priority Enterobacteriaceae in infants' gut commensals and investigate the factors associated with the development of AMR.

METHODS: Stool samples were collected from 67 infants at birth, 6-weeks and 14-weeks. E. coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Enterobacter species were isolated and tested for susceptibility to 22 antibiotics and screened for extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL) production. Chi-square test and logistic regression tests were performed to evaluate the influence of clinical and demographic factors on the carriage of drug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae.

RESULTS: Of the 67 infants, stool samples from 38 infants (58.4%) yielded 200 isolates of Enterobacteriaceae isolates across three-timepoints. E.coli was predominant at 6-weeks (53%) and 14-weeks (63%). Cephalosporins resistance peaked at 6-weeks, with E.coli showing the highest resistance to 3[rd] (43%) and 4[th] (38%) generation cephalosporins. ESBL production was highest at 6-weeks, with 40% of E.coli producing ESBL, and 34% of infants carrying ESBL-producing strains. Maternal postpartum cephalosporin use significantly increased the likelihood of infants carrying cephalosporin-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (p-value = 0.001; OR: 10.4; 95% CI: 2.31-46.83), ESBL-producers (p-value = 0.009), and multidrug-resistant isolates (p-value = 0.027).

CONCLUSION: These findings highlight that cephalosporin-resistant Enterobacteriaceae colonize the infant gut as early as 6-weeks, with maternal postpartum antibiotic exposure playing a significant role. Understanding these early-life drivers of AMR could help inform strategies to mitigate AMR spread in vulnerable populations.

RevDate: 2025-10-09

Xu Z, Zhao D, Guo R, et al (2025)

Bacteroides caecimuris reduces Candida albicans virulence and enhances host antifungal immunity under heat-humidity and high-fat-high-sugar stress.

Microbial pathogenesis pii:S0882-4010(25)00815-0 [Epub ahead of print].

Prolonged exposure to damp-heat environments coupled with high-fat-high-sugar (HFHS) diets disrupts gut microbiota homeostasis and compromises immunity, elevating risks of enteritis, diabetes, and fungal infections. In this study, We established a murine intestinal infection model by simulating damp-heat conditions (35(±2) C, 90% humidity), administering an HFHS diet, and challenging with Candida albicans (C.albicans). Mice were treated with Compound Agrimony Enteritis Capsules (FuFangXianHeCao,FFXHC), a traditional Chinese herbal formulation. Gut microbiota profiling (16S rRNA sequencing) and mechanistic studies (in vivo and in vitro) were performed. 16S rRNA analysis revealed that FFXHC treatment enhanced the abundance of the intestinal flora, with a notable increase in the abundance of Bacteroides caecimuris (B.caecimuris)(Compared with 0.11% in the model group, it increased to 2.9% after FFXHC treatment). Consequently, B.caecimuris was identified as the dominant flora, and its in-vivo and in-vitro effects on C.albicans were investigated. It was determined that FFXHC treatment could stimulate the proliferation of B.caecimuris. In addition, In vitro qPCR and optical density data and in vivo data show that although B.caecimuris could not inhibit the growth of C.albicans, it could improve the survival status and liver function of infected mice, reduce intestinal inflammation, and reduce the colonization of C.albicans by inhibiting the formation of C.albicans hyphae and reducing its virulence. The B.caecimuris contributed to the differentiation of immune cells and the secretion of immune factors in infected mice, thereby enhancing the immune response and fortifying the host defense. Our study supports a role for B. caecimuris in mediating FFXHC anti-Candida effects, bridging traditional medicine with microbiome-based therapeutics. This study provides mechanistic insights into targeting gut microbiota to combat fungal infections under metabolic stress.

RevDate: 2025-10-09

Xu JY, Chen H, Yu YY, et al (2025)

Intestinal Lachnospiraceae bacterium-derived propionate inhibits the progression of clear cell renal cell carcinoma.

Cell reports. Medicine pii:S2666-3791(25)00483-5 [Epub ahead of print].

Gut microbiota has been reported to be associated with the development of various diseases; however, its interaction with clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) remains unknown. To investigate the potential relationship between gut microbiota alterations and ccRCC development, we analyze feces from healthy volunteers and ccRCC patients. We realize that ccRCC patients have a lower abundance of Lachnospiraceae bacterium (L. bacterium). Further experiments reveal that L. bacterium and its metabolite, propionate, exert the antitumor effects. Mechanistically, L. bacterium-derived propionate inhibits tumor cell proliferation and migration by downregulating the expression of homeobox D10 (HOXD10) and its downstream interferon-induced transmembrane protein 1 (IFITM1) and then activating JAK1-STAT1/2 pathway. Furthermore, we design a biofilm-coated L. bacterium as a potential probiotic to improve oral delivery and therapeutic efficacy. Finally, the expanded validation cohort confirms that measuring and targeting L. bacterium and its associated pathways will provide valuable insights into clinical management and improve the prognosis of patients with ccRCC.

RevDate: 2025-10-09
CmpDate: 2025-10-09

Alon M, OM Finkel (2025)

Carving out the microbiota of Earth's largest biomass reservoir.

Cell host & microbe, 33(10):1643-1644.

Despite being an essential part of terrestrial ecosystems for ∼400 million years, the microbiome of wood is surprisingly underexplored. In a recent issue of Nature, Arnold et al. make a long overdue dive into the unique and surprisingly diverse prokaryotic and fungal communities of heartwood and sapwood.

RevDate: 2025-10-09

Wang T, Liu C, Ma R, et al (2025)

Digestive and fermentation characteristics of esterified starches based on digestion kinetics, microbiome and metabolomics analysis.

Food chemistry, 496(Pt 1):146673 pii:S0308-8146(25)03925-1 [Epub ahead of print].

Esterified starch (ES) is one of the most common forms of resistant starch employed in the food industry. In this study, the digestive and fermentation properties of ES with different substitution groups were investigated by digestion kinetics, microbiome and metabolomics. The introduction of esterification groups slows down the digestion rate of starch and alters the crystal structure and molecular weight distribution. Following in vitro fermentation, ES significantly reduced the relative abundance of opportunistic pathogens. Furthermore, predicted analysis indicated that ES enhances the microbiota's capabilities in terms of pyruvate metabolism, and [EC: 1.2.4.1] and [EC: 2.3.1.12] were found to be over-expressed. The intervention of ES mainly regulates the levels of metabolites related to the metabolism and synthesis pathways of amino acids. Structural equation modeling indicates that, the molecular weight distribution of ES can significantly induce changes in the composition of the gut microbiota, and further affect metabolic enzymes and metabolites.

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ESP Quick Facts

ESP Origins

In the early 1990's, Robert Robbins was a faculty member at Johns Hopkins, where he directed the informatics core of GDB — the human gene-mapping database of the international human genome project. To share papers with colleagues around the world, he set up a small paper-sharing section on his personal web page. This small project evolved into The Electronic Scholarly Publishing Project.

ESP Support

In 1995, Robbins became the VP/IT of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, WA. Soon after arriving in Seattle, Robbins secured funding, through the ELSI component of the US Human Genome Project, to create the original ESP.ORG web site, with the formal goal of providing free, world-wide access to the literature of classical genetics.

ESP Rationale

Although the methods of molecular biology can seem almost magical to the uninitiated, the original techniques of classical genetics are readily appreciated by one and all: cross individuals that differ in some inherited trait, collect all of the progeny, score their attributes, and propose mechanisms to explain the patterns of inheritance observed.

ESP Goal

In reading the early works of classical genetics, one is drawn, almost inexorably, into ever more complex models, until molecular explanations begin to seem both necessary and natural. At that point, the tools for understanding genome research are at hand. Assisting readers reach this point was the original goal of The Electronic Scholarly Publishing Project.

ESP Usage

Usage of the site grew rapidly and has remained high. Faculty began to use the site for their assigned readings. Other on-line publishers, ranging from The New York Times to Nature referenced ESP materials in their own publications. Nobel laureates (e.g., Joshua Lederberg) regularly used the site and even wrote to suggest changes and improvements.

ESP Content

When the site began, no journals were making their early content available in digital format. As a result, ESP was obliged to digitize classic literature before it could be made available. For many important papers — such as Mendel's original paper or the first genetic map — ESP had to produce entirely new typeset versions of the works, if they were to be available in a high-quality format.

ESP Help

Early support from the DOE component of the Human Genome Project was critically important for getting the ESP project on a firm foundation. Since that funding ended (nearly 20 years ago), the project has been operated as a purely volunteer effort. Anyone wishing to assist in these efforts should send an email to Robbins.

ESP Plans

With the development of methods for adding typeset side notes to PDF files, the ESP project now plans to add annotated versions of some classical papers to its holdings. We also plan to add new reference and pedagogical material. We have already started providing regularly updated, comprehensive bibliographies to the ESP.ORG site.

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Papers in Classical Genetics

The ESP began as an effort to share a handful of key papers from the early days of classical genetics. Now the collection has grown to include hundreds of papers, in full-text format.

Digital Books

Along with papers on classical genetics, ESP offers a collection of full-text digital books, including many works by Darwin and even a collection of poetry — Chicago Poems by Carl Sandburg.

Timelines

ESP now offers a large collection of user-selected side-by-side timelines (e.g., all science vs. all other categories, or arts and culture vs. world history), designed to provide a comparative context for appreciating world events.

Biographies

Biographical information about many key scientists (e.g., Walter Sutton).

Selected Bibliographies

Bibliographies on several topics of potential interest to the ESP community are automatically maintained and generated on the ESP site.

ESP Picks from Around the Web (updated 28 JUL 2024 )