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Bibliography on: Microbiome

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Robert J. Robbins is a biologist, an educator, a science administrator, a publisher, an information technologist, and an IT leader and manager who specializes in advancing biomedical knowledge and supporting education through the application of information technology. More About:  RJR | OUR TEAM | OUR SERVICES | THIS WEBSITE

RJR: Recommended Bibliography 23 May 2026 at 01:54 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: 2026-05-21

Lu D, Lu J, Yang P, et al (2026)

Microbiome and Lipidomics Reveal the Mechanism of Eight Zhes Decoction on MAFLD.

Combinatorial chemistry & high throughput screening pii:CCHTS-EPUB-155696 [Epub ahead of print].

INTRODUCTION: The therapeutic potential of Eight Zhes Decoction (EZD) against metabolic dysfunction-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD) is well-recognized; however, the underlying biological pathways are not well understood. To address this gap, an integrated investigation using both lipidomics and metagenomics was conducted to reveal the mechanistic rationale behind the effects of EZD.

METHODS: A MAFLD mouse model was established using a Methionine-Choline-Deficient (MCD) diet combined with CCl₁. The mice were treated with EZD for four weeks. Hepatic injury was assessed via H&E, Oil Red O, and Masson staining. Untargeted hepatic lipidomics and shotgun metagenomics were employed to profile lipid species and the gut microbiota composition, respectively.

RESULTS: Histopathological analysis confirmed that EZD significantly alleviated hepatic steatosis, ballooning degeneration, and fibrosis. Lipidomics identified 277 differential lipids; EZD treatment notably downregulated 24 TGs and modulated pathways related to arachidonic acid metabolism and bile secretion. Metagenomics revealed that EZD reshaped the gut microbiota, significantly increasing the abundance of Alistipes sp. while reducing the abundance of Faecalibaculum rodentium.

DISCUSSION: Correlation analysis demonstrated that the restored Alistipes sp. was negatively correlated with multiple hepatic TGs, whereas Faecalibaculum rodentium was positively correlated with lipid accumulation.

CONCLUSION: EZD mitigates MAFLD in mice by synergistically regulating hepatic lipid metabolism and gut microbiota. Specifically, the therapeutic effect involves restoring Alistipes sp. and modulating the gut-liver axis, providing experimental evidence for the clinical application of EZD.

RevDate: 2026-05-21

Yan Q, Liu Y, Liu X, et al (2026)

From the Gut to the Mind: Elucidating the Microbiome-chronobiology Axis in the Context of Depressive Illness.

Current neuropharmacology pii:CN-EPUB-155781 [Epub ahead of print].

INTRODUCTION: Depression is a highly prevalent mood disorder and is often comorbid with gastrointestinal dysfunction and circadian disturbances. Many studies suggest that gut microbiota (GM) dysbiosis and circadian rhythm disruption may contribute to depressive pathophysiology; however, the mechanistic interactions between these systems remain incompletely defined. Deciphering these interactions may provide insights into prospective therapeutic targets or biomarkers for depression, although further mechanistic studies are needed to validate these findings.

METHODS: The PubMed, Web of Science, Embase, and the Cochrane Library for articles published between January 2000 and December 2024 served as the basis of this review for analyzing, which covers original research, meta-analyses, high-impact reviews published in English, and excluding conference abstracts, case reports, and studies focusing solely on animal models without potential translational implications. After independently screening all retrieved articles and resolving discrepancies, a narrative synthesis approach was adopted to integrate data on mechanistic pathways, clinical associations, and translational potential.

RESULTS: In this review, we focused on the dynamic interaction network between the GM and circadian rhythms, considering a new pathway by which they participate in the occurrence and development of depressive symptoms through bidirectional regulation: significant abnormalities in the GM structure of depressed patients are specifically associated with disruption of the circadian rhythm, and this association is dysbiosis-misalignment.

DISCUSSION: Deciphering the molecular mechanisms of the regulatory loop may provide valuable information that can help screen specific therapeutic targets and biomarkers for depression, which may promote the transformation of depression diagnosis and treatment models from symptomatic treatment to precision-targeted intervention.

CONCLUSION: Studies have confirmed dysbiosis-misalignment between the GM and circadian rhythms: dysbiosis can reshape the regulatory system underlying circadian rhythm, and disruption of the circadian rhythm in turn exacerbates dysbiosis. This interaction imbalance may drive the pathophysiological processes of depression. In this review, we highlighted that a comprehensive assessment of the interaction mechanism of the microbiome-chronobiology axis may help overcome the current bottleneck in treating depression and may provide a theoretical basis for developing novel intervention strategies with both timeliness and targeting.

RevDate: 2026-05-21

Seneff S, Nigh G, AM Kyriakopoulos (2026)

Melatonin in Health and Disease and its Metabolism by the Gut Microbes: Implications for Deuterium Homeostasis?.

Current medicinal chemistry pii:CMC-EPUB-155753 [Epub ahead of print].

Deuterium (2H), a heavy isotope of protium (1H), is a naturally occurring element with a significant impact on human metabolism. Despite its natural presence, deuterium can impair mitochondrial function by damaging ATPase pumps; consequently, biological organisms have evolved sophisticated strategies to mitigate the risks of deuterium overload and protect mitochondrial integrity. Multiple enzymes have evolved to prefer hydrogen over deuterium in their reactions to protect these pumps. One class of enzymes is the cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes, which oxidize many substrates, mainly in the Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER), often producing water as a by-product. Furthermore, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), produced in the ER by ERO1, can travel via the cytoplasm to the mitochondria, where it is reduced to two molecules of water via glutathione peroxidase. Melatonin is an ancient antioxidant molecule that first appeared in photosynthetic bacteria billions of years ago to protect against oxygen produced by respiration. In this paper, we present a hypothesis that melatonin metabolism in the gut provides deuterium- depleted protons to the enterocyte mitochondria. Few are aware that melatonin, known mainly as the hormone produced by the pineal gland to regulate circadian rhythms, is produced in the gut at 400 times the amount produced by the pineal gland. In the gut lining, melatonin is synthesized from N-acetylserotonin through the addition of a methyl group from S-adenosylmethionine. This methyl group, which we argue is severely deuterium-depleted due to its gut microbial source, is then fully metabolized by CYP2C19 in the ER of enterocytes in the small intestine, producing four molecules of water, which we argue would also be depleted in deuterium. Melatonin is recycled from the gut to the liver multiple times via the bile acids, and it is repeatedly converted back to N-acetylserotonin and regenerated, each time producing four water molecules derived from its methyl group. Butyrate, another nutrient supplied by gut microbes, stimulates the synthesis of serotonin and melatonin from tryptophan in the gut. Melatonin is a powerful antioxidant in mitochondria and promotes a healthy microbiome. Melatonin deficiency is associated with the severity of long COVID, and melatonin supplementation can help minimize side effects.

RevDate: 2026-05-21

Hackmann TJ, Parris JP, Seshadri R, et al (2026)

Microbe Decoder uncovers functional traits of microbes in microbiome datasets.

Nucleic acids research pii:8688737 [Epub ahead of print].

Microbe Decoder is a web server that predicts functional traits of microbes in microbiome sequencing datasets. Sequencing has revealed thousands of organisms in most ecosystems, but the functional traits of many organisms remain unclear. Existing tools can predict names of organisms or their genes, but they rarely predict concrete biological functions (e.g. fermentation or anaerobic growth). Microbe Decoder fills this gap using three complementary tools relying on taxonomy, metabolic networks, or machine learning. These tools accept either names or gene functions as inputs and are integrated into an easy-to-use web app. When tested against data for microbial isolates, Microbe Decoder showed good predictive performance (e.g. balanced accuracy of 0.85). When applied to datasets from the gut, sediment, and sea, it predicted shifts in functional traits over space and time. Microbe Decoder is designed for use with prokaryotes, with the goal of including eukaryotes in the future. By revealing functional traits of microbes in biological systems, Microbe Decoder will advance biology, medicine, and environmental science. Microbe Decoder is available at https://www.microbe-decoder.org/.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Devi S, Debnath N, Yadav P, et al (2026)

Dynamic Modulation of the Gut Microbiome in Neurodegenerative Diseases: Mechanisms, Therapeutic Potential, and Clinical Perspective.

Comprehensive Physiology, 16(3):e70165.

The gut and brain communicate bidirectionally through the gut microbiota, forming a complex network often referred to as the "microbiota-gut-brain axis." The gastrointestinal microbiome produces various metabolites, including short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), tryptophan-derived compounds, and secondary bile acids. Research indicates that disruptions in the intestinal microbiota (dysbiosis) and impaired gut-brain axis are associated with various neurological conditions. The central nervous system (CNS) influences digestive processes via the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and autonomic nervous system (ANS). On the other hand, the gut reciprocally affects brain function through microbial metabolites, neuroactive substances, and intestinal hormones via multiple pathways, including neural (vagal), immune, and endocrine signaling; however, only a subset of metabolites can directly access the CNS due to blood-brain barrier (BBB) selectivity. These microbial metabolites can directly or indirectly influence the CNS and modulate neuro-immune signaling by activating receptors, such as the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) and G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). By acting as ligands for these receptors, metabolites modulate neural signaling and exert neuroprotective effects. This review discusses how probiotic-derived metabolites modulate the gut-brain axis and provide neuroprotective effects, focusing on the receptors they activate and their downstream signaling pathways involved in neuroprotection.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Ng MK, Jacofsky D, Barsoum W, et al (2026)

Calcium montmorillonite clay: a clinically oriented narrative review of emerging perioperative and supportive applications.

Annals of translational medicine, 14(2):18.

Calcium montmorillonite (CMM) clay, a naturally occurring mineral-rich volcanic clay has garnered scientific attention for its detoxification properties, gastrointestinal (GI) support, skin benefits, and potential metabolic modulation. Recent advances in pharmaceutical-grade formulation and mechanistic understanding have renewed clinical interest in CMM as a low-risk, non-systemic adjunct in modern medical practice. General practitioners and surgeons may find it particularly useful as a safe adjunct in gut health, topical recovery, and inflammatory modulation. With supporting data from preclinical and clinical research, including studies on aflatoxin binding, microbiome modulation, and treatment of radiation enteritis and pediatric diarrhea, CMM represents a promising natural therapeutic mineral for integration into modern health protocols. This narrative review summarizes the biological properties, clinical safety, indications, and emerging efficacy data surrounding CMM, with a focus on potential perioperative and wellness applications.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Garrido-Martín EM, Kontic M, Rooney C, et al (2026)

Immune checkpoints in lung cancer.

Breathe (Sheffield, England), 22(2):250244.

The advent of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) has revolutionised the management of lung cancer, transforming it from a historically immune-resistant malignancy into a paradigm for durable immunotherapy response. This review provides a comprehensive overview of the biological and clinical foundations of checkpoint regulation in the lung and their implications for patient care. We first explore the unique pulmonary immune environment, where continuous exposure to environmental antigens necessitates a delicate balance between tolerance and defence. Within this context, immune checkpoints, such as programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) and its ligand PD-L1 as well as cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-associated protein 4, maintain physiological self-tolerance but can be subverted by tumour cells to evade immune surveillance. Emerging inhibitory receptors, including LAG-3, TIGIT and TIM-3, contribute additional layers of immune regulation and resistance, highlighting opportunities for combinatorial therapeutic strategies. The clinical section summarises pivotal trials establishing ICIs as the standard of care across metastatic, locally advanced and early-stage lung cancer. These agents now span the full disease continuum, from neoadjuvant and adjuvant to perioperative and consolidation settings. We also address the management of immune-related adverse events and the need for precision in patient selection through biomarkers, such as PD-L1 expression, tumour mutational burden and circulating immune signatures. Finally, we discuss ongoing challenges, including mechanisms of primary and acquired resistance, and emerging approaches integrating spatial multi-omics, dynamic immune monitoring and microbiome profiling. Together, these advances are reshaping lung cancer immunotherapy towards a more precise, adaptive and durable model of care.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Ma D, Xu Y, Liang R, et al (2026)

Chlorogenic acid modulates gut microbiota and metabolites to alleviate intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy: Insights from 16S rRNA sequencing and metabolomics.

Biochemistry and biophysics reports, 46:102619.

Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy (ICP) is a liver disorder marked by impaired bile flow, elevated serum bile acids, and pruritus, posing significant risks to maternal and fetal health. Current treatments, including ursodeoxycholic acid, have shown limited efficacy, underscoring the need for more effective therapies. Chlorogenic acid (CGA), a polyphenolic compound with antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and hepatoprotective properties, has shown promise in managing liver diseases, but its role in ICP remains poorly understood. This study investigated the therapeutic effects of CGA in a rat model of ICP induced by 17α-ethinylestradiol. CGA treatment significantly reduced liver enzyme levels, total bile acids, and bilirubin, while improving histopathological liver damage. CGA also modulated key proteins involved in bile acid synthesis and transport, including FXR, CYP7A1, NTCP, and BSEP. Additionally, CGA treatment improved intestinal barrier function by upregulating tight junction proteins, including ZO-1. Metabolomics and 16S rRNA gene sequencing revealed that CGA treatment restored gut microbiota balance in ICP rats. CGA demonstrated a dose-dependent response, with higher doses providing more pronounced therapeutic effects. These findings suggest that CGA alleviates ICP by regulating bile acid metabolism, improving liver function, and modulating the gut microbiome, highlighting its potential as an effective therapeutic option for managing ICP.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Shi H, Jiang L, Cai Y, et al (2026)

Regulatory Effects of a Lipid-Lowering Strain Lactobacillus plantarum 58 Isolated From Dregs Vinegar on Metabolism-Related Gene Expression, Gut Microbiota, and Metabolic Biomarkers of Hybrid Grouper Under High-Fat Diets.

Aquaculture nutrition, 2026:4888310.

Lactobacillus plantarum 58 (lactic acid bacteria [LAB] 58), isolated from vinegar dregs, was incorporated at 1 × 10[8] CFU/g diet into the feeds of hybrid groupers to assess its lipid-lowering efficacy under normal (7.52 % lipid) or high-fat (14.83 % lipid) regimens. A 2 × 2 factorial design generated four diets: C (normal), H (high-fat), C58 (normal + LAB 58), and H58 (high-fat + LAB 58). Serum biochemical parameters tests, histological section, and Oil Red O staining results indicated that in both LAB 58-supplemented groups (C58 and H58), serum triglycerides and total cholesterol (T-CHO) declined regardless of basal lipid content, and hepatic fat vacuolation and lipid-droplet accumulation were markedly curtailed. The qPCR data revealed that LAB 58 elevated the levels of hepatic lipolysis genes (adipose triglyceride lipase [ATGL], carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1 [CPT-1], farnesoid X receptor [FXR], and lipoprotein lipase [LPL]) while simultaneously suppressing lipid synthesis gene expressions (fatty acid synthase [FAS] and stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 [SCD-1]) in the H58 group compared with the H group. Gut-microbiota profiling showed a pronounced Firmicutes-to-Bacteroidetes shift, driven by increased Bacteroides, Faecalibacterium, and Lachnospiraceae-UCG-004; the relative abundance of Lactobacillus spp. surged, especially in the H58 group. Metabolomic analysis of intestinal contents further disclosed elevated levels of beneficial fatty acids-linoleic and α-linolenic acids in H58 group. In conclusion, these findings demonstrate that LAB 58 alleviates lipid metabolic disorders by modulating hepatic gene expression, restructuring the gut microbiota, and enhancing beneficial metabolites.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Lin SH, Lin RJ, Chang RY, et al (2026)

Heterogeneity in the association between gut microbiota and insomnia moderated by Parkinson's disease status.

Frontiers in cellular and infection microbiology, 16:1691665.

INTRODUCTION: Parkinson's disease (PD) is frequently accompanied by insomnia, and emerging evidence suggests the gut microbiome may play a role. This study investigates gut microbiome differences associated with insomnia in PD patients compared to non-PD individuals.

METHODS: We analyzed 310 participants (185 PD patients, 125 controls) categorized by insomnia status. Gut microbiome profiles were obtained using 16S rRNA sequencing and processed with DADA2 using the SILVA database for taxonomic assignment. Alpha and beta diversity analyses and differential abundance analysis were conducted, and functional prediction was performed using PICRUSt2, adjusting for relevant confounders.

RESULTS: Insomnia was linked to higher alpha diversity in non-PD individuals but lower alpha diversity in PD patients. Interaction analysis confirmed distinct associations between insomnia and microbial diversity in the two groups. Differential abundance analysis identified unique insomnia-associated bacterial genera, with differing insomnia-risk-reducing and insomnia-risk-increasing taxa. Functional analysis showed six enriched pathways in controls but only two in PD patients, with no overlap.

DISCUSSION: These findings suggest that insomnia in PD is associated with distinct gut microbiome profiles compared with non-PD individuals. The results highlight the importance of considering disease context when examining microbiome-sleep relationships and may inform future research on microbiome-based approaches for sleep disturbances in PD.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Yaghi M, Gonzalez T, Vecin N, et al (2026)

A bioelectric dressing improves postderoofing outcomes in hidradenitis suppurativa by microbiome modulation: A split-body, randomized clinical trial.

JID innovations : skin science from molecules to population health, 6(4):100461.

UNLABELLED: Hidradenitis suppurativa tunnels represent treatment-resistant disease compartment that perpetuates inflammation, microbial dysbiosis, and relapse. Surgical deroofing remains the standard intervention, yet optimal postoperative wound management strategies are lacking.

OBJECTIVES: We aimed to evaluate the efficacy of a wireless bioelectric wound dressing compared with that of standard of care in modulating tunnel-associated microbiota and preventing surgical site recurrence after hidradenitis suppurativa deroofing.

METHODS: In this randomized, single-center, split-body trial, patients with bilateral Hurley stages II-III axillary disease underwent tunnel deroofing, with 1 side randomized to bioelectric wound dressing or standard of care (petrolatum and gauze dressing). Subjects (n = 12) were followed for 8 weeks to assess primary outcomes: healing rates. Secondary outcomes included disease recurrence at week 8, change in bacterial load, microbiome composition, and QOL.

RESULTS: Bioelectric wound dressing-treated sites showed a significant reduction in bacterial load at weeks 2 and 4 after excision, with enrichment of commensals and a shift away from anaerobic taxa, which were not observed in standard of care-treated sites. Minimal recurrences were observed on bioelectric wound dressing-treated sides alone compared with multiple recurrences on standard of care-treated sites, with trends of improved healing trajectories.

CONCLUSIONS: Optimized wound care holds a potential to reduce surgical site recurrence and reverse hidradenitis suppurativa dysbiosis. Our data emphasize the importance of postsurgical care to improve outcomes in patients with hidradenitis suppurativa. This trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov with NCT05057429. Study registration was submitted on September 15, 2021.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Aizpurua O, Brenner E, Martin-Bideguren G, et al (2026)

Beyond the core microbiome: endemic bacteria drive functional and microdiversity differences across salamander populations.

ISME communications, 6(1):ycag106.

Population-specific variation in animal microbiomes is well documented, yet the functional consequences and underlying mechanisms remain poorly understood. To address this, we conducted genome-resolved metagenomic analyses on gut and skin microbiomes from four populations of Pyrenean brook salamanders (Calotriton asper) inhabiting two distinct environments: Pyrenean subalpine brooks and Atlantic montane streams. From paired faecal and skin swab samples, we reconstructed 539 and 43 metagenome-assembled genomes, respectively, and examined taxonomic composition, metabolic capacity, and microdiversity across environments. Although alpha diversity remained similar across environments, both gut and skin microbiomes exhibited significant differences in community composition and functional potential between environments. Partitioning the gut microbiome into core, endemic, and marginal fractions revealed a dominant core community-shared across environments and accounting for over 85% of reads-that did not drive functional divergence. Instead, functional differences were primarily shaped by low-abundance, population-specific endemic bacteria. Atlantic salamanders hosted endemic taxa with significantly greater metabolic potential and higher strain-level microdiversity than those at the Pyrenees. These patterns were not associated with broad-scale dietary differences and may reflect environmental influences such as temperature and nutrient availability. Our findings highlight the relevance of rare, endemic bacteria in driving microbiome function and underscore the power of genome-resolved metagenomics to uncover functional and evolutionary dynamics in wild host-microbe systems.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Green M, Cleary S, Kwiecien-Delaney B, et al (2026)

Compositional maturation of the microbiome and adaptive immunity in the postnatal period.

Frontiers in immunology, 17:1772425.

INTRODUCTION: Recent research has highlighted the role of the gut microbiome in shaping the development and function of the mammalian immune system. Interactions between these complex networks of microbes and host cells serve not only to train major aspects of adaptive and innate immunity but also to establish commensal host-microbe relationships and symbiosis throughout the lifespan. T-cells are a critical aspect of this paradigm, acting as intermediates between the microbiome and many aspects of host health and disease. Despite a large body of literature examining these interactions, we have yet to completely understand how the ontogeny of these systems co-evolves across the lifespan and how the emergence of specific T-cell-microbe signals relates to key developmental milestones.

METHODS: To answer this question, this work conducted a compositional integrative analysis on deep immune and microbiome profiling of wild-type C57Bl/6 mice across the first two weeks of life, post-weaning, and young adulthood.

RESULTS: The results show that T-cell ontogeny follows different developmental trends in mucosal and peripheral immune compartments and that temporal trends in microbial community abundance creates a modular network of associations between specific taxa and functional T-cell subsets.

DISCUSSION: These results provide insight into the longitudinal development of microbiota-immune system interactions throughout the lifespan, as well as the mechanistic relevance of microbiota-derived signals at key developmental milestones.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Mao Q, Lin B, Xia W, et al (2026)

Melatonin-induced restoration of the intestinal mucosal barrier in inflammatory bowel disease via activation of the SIRT1-LKB1-pAMPK axis.

Frontiers in immunology, 17:1811583.

BACKGROUND: Numerous studies indicated inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients suffered from sleep disturbances. Although melatonin (MT) exerts positive effects on maintaining circadian rhythms and anti-inflammation, its impact on the gut microbiome and its function in mediating gut health remain largely unexplored. To evaluate the efficacy and investigate the mechanisms of MT in repairing the intestinal mucosal barrier in IBD.

METHODS: Fecal MT and its metabolites in IBD patients were detected. A DSS-induced colitis mice model and a LPS-stimulated NCM460 cell inflammation model were used to explore the mechanism of melatonin in IBD.

RESULTS: IBD patients had lower levels of serum MT and fecal 2-oxomelatonin. Furthermore, MT enhances intestinal antimicrobial peptides and effectively alleviates colitis. Mechanistically, MT restored the abundance of the probiotic Akkermansia and decreased the conditional pathogen Desulfovibrio. MT upregulates the SIRT1 (Sirtuin 1) and pAMPK (phosphorylated AMP-Activated Protein Kinase) in mouse colonic tissues. Whereas Ex-527 (the SIRT1 inhibitor) and Compound C (the pAMPK inhibitor) abolished the protective effects of MT in DSS mice. In LPS-stimulated cells, the inhibitor blocked the regulation of MT on proinflammatory factors, antimicrobial peptides and tight junctions. Mechanistically, MT was associated with activation of the SIRT1-LKB1-pAMPK pathway, suggesting its potential involvement in regulating the above changes.

CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that MT may ameliorate colitis by regulating gut microbiota, modulating antimicrobial peptide secretion, and reinforcing intestinal epithelial barrier integrity potentially via activation of the SIRT1-LKB1-pAMPK axis.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Yu J, Li Q, Zou S, et al (2026)

Antibiotic use and immune-related adverse events in patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors: analysis of the FAERS database.

Frontiers in immunology, 17:1733373.

BACKGROUND: The use of antibiotics may influence the efficacy and toxicity of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) by altering the gut microbiota. However, current evidence on the link between antibiotic use and immune-related adverse events (irAEs) is limited. This study aims to evaluate whether antibiotics increase the risk of irAEs in ICI-treated patients and to examine their relationship to the timing of irAEs onset.

METHODS: We analyzed data from the FAERS database from 2014 to the fourth quarter of 2024. Using multivariable logistic regression and descriptive statistical analyses, we evaluated the association between antibiotic co-reporting and irAE reporting frequency and the timing across different antibiotic categories and ICIs regimens.

RESULTS: Our study included 155,157 patients treated with ICIs, of whom 9,518 (6.1%) received antibiotic therapy. Patients who used antibiotics had a significantly higher reported frequency risk of irAEs (OR = 1.17; 95%CI: 1.12-1.23; FDR<0.001) compared to those who did not. The strongest associations were observed in patients receiving fluoroquinolones, sulfonamides, penicillin, macrolides, cephalosporins, and monobactams. Co-reporting was associated with a higher reported frequency of irAEs in patients receiving PD-L1 inhibitors (OR = 1.51; 95% CI: 1.39-1.65; FDR<0.001). In exploratory descriptive analysis restricted to patients who reported irAEs, the median time to first reported irAE was shorter in the antibiotic co-reporting group than in the non-co-reporting group (31 days (IQR: 9-105) vs. 42 days (IQR: 14-122), Wilcoxon rank-sum test P < 0.001). Stratified analysis by ICI type showed that this pattern was most evident in patients receiving PD-1 inhibitors.

CONCLUSIONS: Analysis of the FAERS database suggests that antibiotic co-reporting during ICIs therapy is associated with a higher reported frequency of irAEs and a shorter median time to first reported irAE among patients who experienced irAEs. These findings are subject to the inherent limitations of the FAERS database, including the inability to determine the temporal sequence of antibiotic and ICI exposure, unmeasured confounding, reporting artifacts, and the unsuitability of spontaneous reporting data for formal time-to-event analysis. Prospective cohort studies with detailed medication timing, clinical phenotyping, and microbiome profiling are needed to validate these signals.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Yin X, Peng H, Li Y, et al (2026)

Ankylosing spondylitis and the gut microbiome: future research hotspots and trends.

Frontiers in immunology, 17:1784757.

BACKGROUND: Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is an autoimmune disease. Its exact cause remains unclear. It is generally believed to result from a combination of genetic and environmental factors, as well as immune disorders. However, growing evidence suggests that the gut microbiota plays a key role in the pathogenesis of AS. Therefore, this study aims to systematically analyze the current state of research on AS and the gut microbiome. It also explores future research hotspots.

METHODS: We searched the Web of Science Core Collection (WoSCC) and PubMed databases, including relevant literature on AS and the gut microbiome published up to January 1, 2026. We then performed a visualized bibliometric analysis using CiteSpace, VOSviewer, and Bibliometrix software.

RESULTS: The WoSCC dataset included 165 articles. Both the annual publication volume and citation counts showed an upward trend. Brown, Ma, and Liu B were the most productive authors. Regarding country output, China ranked first with 60 articles, followed by the USA with 36. Major contributing institutions were also primarily located in China and the USA. Current research hotspots focus on inflammation, Mendelian randomization, HLA-B27, probiotics, and short-chain fatty acids. A validation analysis using the PubMed database (115 articles) yielded results consistent with the WoSCC findings.

CONCLUSION: Our study provides key insights into the relationship between the gut microbiota and AS. It clarifies current research hotspots and development trends. Future researchers should conduct prospective studies to confirm causality and combine multi-omics analysis to reveal underlying molecular mechanisms.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Hu S, He C, Sun K, et al (2026)

The gut-liver/bile axis: Gut microbiota and bacterial extracellular vesicles remodeling hepatobiliary pathogenesis.

iScience, 29(5):115623.

Global hepatobiliary disease burden is increasing, prompting gut-liver axis research. Gut microbiota-secreted bacterial extracellular vesicles (BEVs) carry bioactive molecules affecting host immunity, inflammation, and metabolism. Whether BEVs actively or passively cause liver damage is unclear. This review suggests gut-derived BEVs trigger hepatic innate immunity and sterile inflammation. By combining current findings on how gut microbes, their BEVs, and hepatobiliary diseases interact, we improve the "gut-liver/bile axis" idea. Acknowledging BEVs' active part in disease offers new ways to use them as diagnostic markers and treatment targets, likely better managing hepatobiliary disorders.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Unuvar GK, Mese EA, J Rello (2026)

Strategies to prevent cross-transmission of multidrug-resistant microorganisms in intensive care units: A narrative review.

Journal of intensive medicine, 6(3):221-228.

Organisms' transmission in intensive care units (ICUs) should be addressed by modulation of the skin and gut microbiome (endogenous) or by acquisition of the environment (exogenous). The microbiome has recently been reported as a reservoir of organisms, modulating the immune host response. Interventions on the gut microbiome are a promising way to prevent the development of hospital-acquired infections in the ICU and reduce the risk of cross-transmission of multidrug-resistant microorganisms. Maintaining the cleanliness of patient care areas is a safety strategy for preventing healthcare-associated infections and recent insights on microbiome modulation to reduce the risk for cross-infection. Evidence indicates that regular cleanliness monitoring can positively influence patient outcomes. The development of standardized cleaning checklists is strongly recommended. Key procedural strategies include preliminary site evaluations to determine the extent of contamination or surface damage, cleaning from low-touch to high-touch areas, and progressing from clean to contaminated regions. Chemical agents such as quaternary ammonium compounds, sodium hypochlorite, and hydrogen peroxide are effective for decontamination. Studies demonstrate a positive correlation between the number of touches a surface receives and its bacterial load, emphasizing the importance of assessing contamination levels and cleaning quality. Such evaluations inform the development of environmental cleaning protocols, guide facility policies, and improve program effectiveness. Cleanliness evaluation monitoring should measure the assessment of cleaning practices and cleanliness levels. Using probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics is an innovative strategy to reduce dysbiosis and improve host immunity. Lastly, strengthening staff education is essential to enhancing environmental infection control.

RevDate: 2026-05-21
CmpDate: 2026-05-21

Glapa-Nowak A, Nowak JK, Kurek S, et al (2026)

What a pickle-a metagenomic perspective on the cucumber fermentation.

Frontiers in microbiology, 17:1809866.

Food fermentation involves an interplay between multiple strains and species. This delicate composition during fermentation has been investigated so far using both classical and molecular methods; however, the results remain difficult to interpret. In this perspective article, we discuss the spontaneous fermentation of cucumber from organic and commercial cultivation (from 1st day to 90th day) based on our preliminary data from a nanopore sequencing study. The present study is the first to report the occurrence of coagulase-negative cocci in cucumber fermentation [Staphylococcus saprophyticus (0.01%) and Staphylococcus schleiferi (0.03%)]. Furthermore, we conclude that own-cultivation cucumbers may exhibit a lower incidence and diversity of phages, which have practical implications for designing future studies as well as for direct consumers. Our data also show that, even in the absence of phages (own-cultivation cucumbers <1%), lactic acid bacteria dominance occurs, which contrasts with previous conclusions and contributes to the discussion on the role of phages in maintaining the balance between Enterobacteriaceae and lactic acid bacteria in plant fermentation. The powerful metagenomic approach provides a broader understanding of the day-to-day and sample-to-sample diversity within microbiome communities. The maturity of the fermentation product may play a significant role in exerting specific biological actions. This should be accounted for before planning an intervention study.

RevDate: 2026-05-19
CmpDate: 2026-05-19

Bogatyrenko E, Dunkai T, A Kim (2026)

Core Bacterial Microbiome in Wild Sea Cucumbers (Apostichopus japonicus) from the Sea of Japan.

Indian journal of microbiology, 66(2):441-451.

UNLABELLED: The taxonomic composition of gut bacterial communities in wild Japanese sea cucumbers, Apostichopus japonicus, from coastal waters of the Russian part of the Sea of Japan was identified by high-throughput sequencing. The bacterial communities were comprised mainly of the phyla Proteobacteria (38.33-57.22%), Actinobacteriota (24.24-29.93%), Firmicutes (12.01-25.12%), and Bacteroidota (1.6-2.17%) that made up a total of 94.5% of the samples studied. As the results showed, the region and habitat have a significant effect on the bacterial structure of the gut microbiome in A. japonicus. The invertebrates from each of the water bodies under study were characterized by their unique sets of symbiotic microorganisms. However, 32 bacterial genera were found in the animals from all of the water bodies. Of these, nine bacterial genera were the dominant taxa in terms of percentage of their representation in the samples: Stappia (15.89-34.68%), Stenotrophomonas (3.45-11.44%), Bacillus (1.05-7.71%), Staphylococcus (4.64-11.76%), Rhodococcus (3.07-11.08%), Corynebacterium (2.55-7.77%), Cutibacterium (15.89-34.68%), Pseudomonas (1.2-1.7%), and Streptococcus (1.09-1.57%). The discovery of bacterial genera common across all samples indicates the existence of a core microbiome potentially essential for the host's health and functions.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12088-025-01493-w.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Kumar S, Jindal A, Mainuddin , et al (2026)

Unraveling the Multifunctional and Translational Paradigm of Nanoparticulate Systems against Colorectal Cancer.

ACS applied bio materials [Epub ahead of print].

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a health burden due to its high mortality rate, recurrence rate, and drug resistance. The limitations of traditional methodologies (such as radiotherapy, chemotherapy, surgery, and targeted active ingredients) include inefficient delivery to tumor tissue, systemic toxicity, drug resistance, and poor specificity. Hence, drug delivery through micro- and nanoparticulate systems offers innovations and can address these obstacles successfully. The design, functionality, and translational potential of particulate systems specifically designed for CRC treatment are reviewed in this study. Next, this review discusses various primary aspects, including the types of carriers (polymeric, solid lipid, inorganic, and hybrid nanoparticles/NP), their particulate physical attributes (size, shape, surface charge, composition), and factors affecting drug encapsulation and release kinetics that affect the basic design principles. Additionally, this review unfolds a discussion over targeting approaches, such as active ligand-mediated targeting, passive EPR-based accumulation, and stimulus-responsive systems activated by external stimuli, pH, enzymes, redox, or even the microbiome. Furthermore, conventional chemotherapeutics, phytochemicals and nutraceuticals, gene-based therapies (siRNA, miRNA), and combinatorial modalities (chemo and immunotherapy, photothermal, photodynamic) are included in the therapeutic payloads. Moreover, in vitro, in vivo, and clinical-stage nanoparticulate systems are highlighted with translational advancements. Specifically, this review emphasizes the benefits offered, including enhanced solubility, stability, targeted distribution, and multifunctionality (imaging, triggered release). In addition, primary challenges to translation, such as regulatory, scalability, reproducibility, biological processes, and long-term safety issues, are also discussed. Conclusively, innovative approaches like regulatory frameworks, microbiome-driven delivery designs, aspects of artificial intelligence/machine learning (AI/ML)-guided optimization, and stealth and biomimetic hybrid particulates can be beneficial from futuristic aspects. Suggestively, to expedite the transition from NP invention to effective CRC therapeutics, a translational roadmap is required that encourages the combination of modern materials science, computational design, and clinical validation.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Julanon N, Unhapipatpong C, Wongjirattikarn R, et al (2026)

Role of Probiotics in Managing Acne Vulgaris: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Clinical Trials.

Journal of cutaneous medicine and surgery [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Dysregulation of the skin microbiome is implicated in acne pathogenesis.

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy of probiotics in the management of acne.

METHODS: Searches were conducted in 3 databases through June 30, 2024. Clinical trials that compared probiotics with controls and investigated their efficacy in acne were included. Primary outcomes were standardized mean differences (SMDs) for the change from baseline to posttreatment in total lesion count (TLC), noninflammatory lesion count (NILC), and inflammatory lesion count (ILC). Secondary outcomes included Global Acne Grading System (GAGS) scores, Investigator's Global Assessment, erythema, and sebum levels.

RESULTS: Thirteen studies comprising 18 study arms and 1453 participants were included. There were no significant reductions in TLC (SMD, -0.22; 95% confidence interval [CI]: -0.50 to 0.07; I[2] = 75%), NILC (SMD, -0.20; 95% CI: -0.48 to 0.08; I[2] = 72%), or ILC (SMD, -0.13; 95% CI: -0.34 to 0.09; I[2] = 52%) with probiotics compared with controls. However, oral probiotics were associated with a significant reduction in GAGS scores (SMD, -0.47; 95% CI: -0.81 to -0.13; I[2] = 67%) versus controls. Subgroup analyses indicated that this effect was most prominent in mild-to-moderate acne patients who received oral probiotics containing Lactobacillus species combined with other strains for a minimum of 12 weeks.

CONCLUSIONS: Probiotics did not demonstrate a significant reduction in acne lesion counts. However, they were associated with improvements in acne severity as measured by GAGS scores. These findings should be interpreted with caution given the heterogeneity across studies and the fluctuating natural course of acne.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Zhang Q, Li Y, Han Y, et al (2026)

Correction to "Lactiplantibacillus plantarum FEED8 Biosynthesis of Pyranoanthocyanin (Cyanidin-3-glucoside-4-vinylcatechol) Improves Oxidative Stress and Inflammation of the Gut Microbiome in Cadmium-Exposed Mice".

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Jeilu O, Simachew A, Hartmann EM, et al (2026)

CAZyme fold architecture is conserved between disparate environments despite extreme sequence divergence.

mSystems [Epub ahead of print].

Microbial carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZymes) underpin carbon cycling across Earth's ecosystems; however, how contrasting environments shape CAZyme diversity and structural conservation remains poorly understood. Here, we applied shotgun metagenomics to compare the carbohydrate-degradation potential of two functionally prolific but physicochemically opposed ecosystems: the alkaline-saline soda lakes of the East African Rift Valley and the anaerobic ruminant gut. From 34 metagenomes (12 soda lake and 22 rumen), we recovered 371 quality-filtered metagenome-assembled genomes, of which 84% of soda lake and 52% of rumen MAGs represented novel species. Rumen communities, dominated by Bacteroidota, Fibrobacterota, and Bacillota, exhibited significantly higher taxonomic diversity and were enriched in carbohydrate catabolism and fermentation pathways. Soda lake communities, dominated by Pseudomonadota, displayed greater evolutionary divergence (lower RED scores) and were enriched in pH homeostasis, oxidative and osmotic stress, sulfur cycling, and carbon fixation pathways. To assess whether structural conservation persists despite extreme sequence divergence, we predicted three-dimensional structures for 12 representative enzymes from six glycoside hydrolase families (GH1, GH3, GH5_11, GH9, GH10, and GH28) using AlphaFold 3. All 12 structures adopted canonical GH family folds with high confidence (pTM 0.75-0.97). These results demonstrate that environmental selection drives distinct taxonomic and functional strategies for carbon processing while preserving three-dimensional CAZyme architecture, positioning soda lake and rumen metagenomes as complementary reservoirs for bioprospecting industrially relevant enzymes.IMPORTANCECarbohydrate-active enzymes, or CAZymes, are the molecular machines that microorganisms use to break down plant material and other complex sugars, and they underpin both the global carbon cycle and many industrial processes, from biofuel production to food, feed, and textile manufacturing. In this study, we compared the CAZyme repertoires of two microbial worlds that could hardly be more different: the alkaline, salty soda lakes of the East African Rift Valley, and the anaerobic stomachs of cattle, sheep, and goats. We show that although these communities are taxonomically distinct and their enzyme sequences have diverged dramatically, the three-dimensional shapes of their key carbohydrate-degrading enzymes remain remarkably well preserved. Soda lakes, in particular, hold a large pool of previously uncharacterised enzymes, identifying them as a promising, largely untapped source of robust biocatalysts for sustainable biotechnology and industrial applications.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Revel-Muroz AZ, Sonets IV, Chistyakov AS, et al (2026)

Gut Hi-C metagenomes of severe COVID-19 patients: bacteria and yeast involved in gut-lung axis.

mSphere [Epub ahead of print].

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) poses a critical threat to global health, particularly in intensive care units, where vulnerable patients are frequently exposed to multidrug-resistant microorganisms. The human gut microbiome serves as a key reservoir for AMR genes, which can disseminate to other body sites, including the lungs, especially during severe illness. We applied Hi-C metagenomics to stool samples from 11 critically ill COVID-19 patients and analyzed microbial isolates from their lungs to investigate intra-host transmission of AMR genes. Plasmid-resolved microbial interaction networks revealed AMR gene sharing across 13 bacterial genera, primarily from Firmicutes and Proteobacteria, with evidence of plasmid-mediated transfer across phylum boundaries and between gut and lung compartments. Notably, we identified genetically identical Klebsiella pneumoniae strains colonizing both the gut and lungs of a single patient, as well as shared plasmids carrying qnrS-1 and blaCTX-M-231 resistance genes between gut Escherichia coli and lung K. pneumoniae. In addition to bacterial pathogens, Candida yeast species isolated from both niches harbored resistance genes to multiple antifungal classes, including azoles. These findings underscore the dynamic, cross-compartmental nature of AMR dissemination within the human body and highlight the importance of integrative surveillance strategies to control resistance in clinical settings.IMPORTANCEWhile COVID-19 itself caused severe illness, many deaths were ultimately due to secondary microbial infections-often worsened by antibiotic resistance. Plasmids, which shuttle resistance genes between bacterial species, are key players in their spread, yet their roles in transmission, especially across body sites such as the gut and lungs, are to be elucidated. The use of Hi-C metagenomics allowed us to map bacterium-plasmid links in the guts of severe COVID-19 patients and reconstruct high-quality genomes of opportunistic fungi. Comparing these with lung-derived isolate genomes, we gained insight into possible intra-host dissemination routes of resistance genes. Preparing for future pandemics will require not only rapid pathogen detection but also tools to monitor microbiome health and resistance dynamics, and understanding how treatments and microbial imbalances shape infection risks.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Chen X, Chen GG, Gong Z, et al (2026)

The middle ear-nasopharyngeal microbiome axis associated with obstructive Eustachian tube dysfunction in chronic otitis media.

mSystems [Epub ahead of print].

Obstructive Eustachian tube dysfunction (ETD) commonly complicates chronic otitis media (COM), yet microbial factors at the Eustachian tube (ET) openings remain poorly understood. In this prospective cohort study, we characterized the microbiota at both the middle ear (ME) and nasopharyngeal (NP) ET openings in COM patients undergoing ear surgery and examined associations with obstructive ETD over one year of follow-up. Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing and functional inference, we profiled microbial communities from the ME-side ET opening and the torus tubarius on both surgical-side and contralateral nasopharynx. Among 37 patients (18 with ETD, 19 without), ME and NP microbiota differed significantly in composition. Ears with ETD showed increased ME microbial diversity and enrichment of Neobacillus, Agrobacterium, and Sphingomonas. Paired NP-ME analyses indicated an altered NP-ME microbial relationship in ETD, with Neobacillus showing a nasopharyngeal source signal. Functional prediction revealed increased porphyrin metabolism and decreased pyruvate metabolism in ME microbiota with ETD, suggesting a shift toward biofilm formation and altered redox states. Anaerococcus was increased in the nasopharynx of patients with bilateral COM. These findings identify distinct microbial and metabolic features of COM with obstructive ETD, supporting a role for nasopharyngeal-microbial influence on ME pathology.IMPORTANCEChronic otitis media (COM) is a common and often persistent ear disease, especially when complicated by Eustachian tube dysfunction (ETD). By profiling microbiota at both Eustachian tube openings, this study links upper-airway microbial ecology with middle-ear microbial states in COM and helps clarify where clinically relevant signals may arise along the Eustachian tube pathway. The paired nasopharyngeal-middle ear design revealed that nasopharyngeal microbes may be linked to middle-ear community shifts in COM with obstructive ETD, consistent with a potential upper airway contribution to the middle-ear microbiota, generating testable hypotheses about microbial exchange and persistence. These findings highlight the upper airway microbiome as a potential target for developing new preventive and therapeutic strategies in COM.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Borren NZ, Paulides E, Klaassen MAY, et al (2026)

Microbiome-Directed Therapy for Fatigue in Quiescent Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Randomized Placebo-Controlled Trial of Multi-Strain Probiotic Supplementation.

The American journal of gastroenterology pii:00000434-990000000-02193 [Epub ahead of print].

INTRODUCTION: Fatigue is a challenging symptom for patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). Emerging evidence links alterations in the gut microbiome with fatigue in IBD, highlighting the potential of microbiome-targeted treatments. Our aim was to evaluate the clinical efficacy and biological effects of a multi-strain probiotic supplementation on fatigue in patients with quiescent IBD.

METHODS: This multi-center, placebo-controlled, randomized controlled trial included patients with quiescent IBD, defined as being in clinical remission and a colonoscopy within 1 year which demonstrated no active disease, and with significant fatigue (FACIT-F score < 43). Patients were randomized to receive either probiotics (Ecologic® BARRIER, containing 9 different bacterial strains) or placebo for 12 weeks. Gut microbiome and serum metabolome were analyzed at baseline and at the end of the study.

RESULTS: Our study enrolled 100 patients (52 Crohn's disease (CD), 44 ulcerative colitis (UC), 4 IBD-unspecified) with quiescent IBD and with a mean age of 41 years; 61% were women. After 12 weeks, 29.4% of the probiotic group and 40.0% of the placebo group met criteria for no fatigue (p=0.34). However, all participants reported an improvement in fatigue (p<0.001) with the most striking change noted at 4 weeks in both groups. Probiotic treatment led to beneficial shifts in gut microbiome and serum metabolome composition, particularly an increase in Bifidobacterium animalis after 12 weeks.

DISCUSSION: While 12 weeks of probiotic administration was not associated with relief of fatigue in patients with quiescent IBD, we observed beneficial alterations in the gut microbiome and serum metabolome. ClincialTrials.gov number, NCT03266484.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

O'Sullivan B, Herbst KW, Hogan AH, et al (2026)

Comparison of a long-read amplicon sequencing approach to short-read amplicons for microbiome analysis.

Microbiology spectrum [Epub ahead of print].

UNLABELLED: Most microbiome studies to date rely on sequencing short amplicons of the 16S rRNA gene on Illumina's platforms. Because of the short read length, sequences often can be identified reliably only to the family or genus levels. Long-read sequencing with whole-length 16S rRNA sequencing can improve taxonomic resolution but often only to the species level. StrainID is an alternative approach that amplifies a large segment of the ribosomal operon, including the entire 16S rRNA gene, internal transcribed spacer, and a portion of the 23S rRNA gene. This longer amplicon is designed to allow ribotype-level classification. Although studies have demonstrated the utility of StrainID for several sample types, a direct comparison of StrainID to alternative approaches has not been done for saliva. Here, we compared the performance of StrainID to short-read amplicons with saliva samples as well as a synthetic mock DNA community. Short reads were amplified with primer pairs targeting the V1-V3 region of the 16S rRNA gene and were classified with several different taxonomic databases. We found that StrainID outperformed short reads not only in identifying amplicon sequence variants to the species level but also in demonstrating a key benefit with phylogenetic-based beta-diversity tests. Our results further build on establishing StrainID as a powerful method and specifically for its use with saliva samples.

IMPORTANCE: The interpretation of microbiome composition studies is highly dependent on the methodologies chosen during experimental design, which affects factors such as resolution, throughput, cost, and accuracy. StrainID is an approach that can improve resolution while maintaining high-throughput and similar costs to short-read sequencing. The salivary microbiome represents a diverse community of microbes with links to a variety of health conditions and disease states. Closely related strains of bacteria can have drastically different effects on their host. Establishing StrainID as a valid approach for studying the salivary microbiome opens avenues for research that improve upon alternative methods by increasing sensitivity and accuracy compared to traditional short-read approaches.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Jain M, Babu R, A Jain (2026)

Phosphate binders and the gut microbiota in chronic kidney disease: mechanisms, mixed evidence, and clinical considerations.

Journal of nephrology pii:8687430 [Epub ahead of print].

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) disrupts the gut microbiome through dietary restrictions, uraemia, and polypharmacy, including phosphate binders. This dysbiosis contributes to systemic inflammation, accumulation of uremic toxins, and reduced short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-producing bacteria. Hyperphosphatemia, a key CKD complication, typically emerges in advanced stages. This review examines the impact of phosphate binders on gut microbiota and explores emerging biological therapies. Phosphate binders are standard treatment for hyperphosphatemia but may influence gut microbiota by altering luminal pH, intestinal transit, and availability of metabolites such as SCFAs and vitamin K. These changes can impair gut barrier integrity and promote inflammation. Evidence on their microbiome effects is mixed: some studies show minimal compositional changes with calcium acetate or sucroferric oxyhydroxide, while others report individual variability and subtle taxon-specific shifts, particularly with iron-based binders. Even when compositional changes are limited, certain binders may modulate uremic toxin levels. Given the limitations of conventional therapies, biological approaches such as probiotics, synbiotics, and phosphate-accumulating organisms (PAOs) are gaining interest. These strategies may reduce intestinal phosphate availability by lowering pH, enhancing calcium-phosphate binding, and promoting microbial phosphate uptake and storage, while supporting gut barrier function. Overall, current evidence remains heterogeneous and limited by small cohorts and preclinical designs. Although microbiota-targeted therapies show mechanistic promise, robust clinical trials are needed before they can be recommended beyond adjunctive use.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Zhu B, Chen S, Diao Y, et al (2026)

Dissecting the Ecological Structure of Health and Disease in the Global Gut Microbiome.

Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) [Epub ahead of print].

The gut microbiota plays a crucial role in human health, but its coordinated ecological dynamics remain largely unclear. We present Wiredancer, a novel scalable framework based on similarity-constrained non-negative matrix factorization (NMF), which extracts continuous and overlapping microbial ecological factors (MEFs). By integrating 20,178 metagenomes spanning 36 countries and over 50 disease states, Wiredancer identified three robust and interpretable MEFs delineating the health-disease continuum. MEF1, the dysbiotic factor dominated by Bacteroides uniformis, was elevated in disease populations; MEF2, the protective factor characterized by Prevotella copri, was reduced compared with the healthy group; and MEF3, the intermediate factor represented by Bifidobacterium adolescentis, reflected a mixed ecological configuration between MEF1 and MEF2. MEFs exhibited high reproducibility across individuals and longitudinal cohorts, but showed significantly increased variability in disease, consistent with the Anna Karenina principle and highlighting disrupted ecological stability. These findings were validated in the largest Chinese metagenomic cohort of major psychiatric disorders, where MEFs were associated with clinical symptoms, peripheral biomarkers, and disease subtypes, and remained essentially stable under short-term treatment. Together, Wiredancer provides a generalizable strategy to define microbiome states and decode ecological transitions, offering new opportunities for precision diagnostics and stratified medicine in complex disorders.

RevDate: 2026-05-19
CmpDate: 2026-05-19

Ulrich JF, Redlich SB, Mohr A, et al (2026)

Marine Rhodobacterales as Drivers of Ulva Growth: From Macroalgal-Bacterial Interactions to Bioactive Factor Enrichment.

Journal of chemical ecology, 52(3):.

Marine bacteria significantly influence the development and productivity of algal communities. The green seaweed Ulva (Chlorophyta) relies on bacteria that secrete algal growth and morphogenesis-promoting factors (AGMPF). In a reductionist model system of Ulva compressa (cultivar U. mutabilis), the diverse microbiome can be substituted by two key bacteria, Roseovarius sp. MS2 and Maribacter sp. MS6, both of which release AGMPFs, thereby inducing cell division and cell differentiation. Our study examined various algal growth-promoting substances produced by marine Rhodobacterales (Alphaproteobacteria). The exploration survey indicated that 74 of the 97 examined strains demonstrated growth-promoting, cytokine-like action. These findings underscore the extensive impact of marine Rhodobacterales on Ulva growth. Bioactive fractions containing AGMPF activity were enriched from the culture supernatant of Roseovarius sp. strain MS2. Bioactive raw extracts were obtained through bioassay-guided fractionation and semi-preparative high-performance liquid chromatography; cell division-promoting properties were observed, but did not reach the activity level of the harvested supernatant. This study provides new insights that underscore the importance of bacterial-macroalgal interactions for marine ecosystems. Replacing bacteria with AGMPFs, including thallusin, enables the complete thallus formation of axenic Ulva cultures, facilitating various applications in biotechnology and aquaculture.

RevDate: 2026-05-19
CmpDate: 2026-05-19

Sain M, Rani S, Singh SP, et al (2026)

The Influence of Gut Microbiome on Alpha-Synuclein Aggregation: Implications for Parkinson's Disease Pathogenesis.

Molecular neurobiology, 63(1):.

Parkinson's disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder traditionally characterized by dopaminergic neuronal loss in the substantia nigra and the accumulation of misfolded α-synuclein (α-syn) aggregates. While genetic susceptibility and environmental exposures are well-recognized contributors to PD, growing evidence indicates that disease initiation and progression may also involve peripheral mechanisms originating in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. Early non-motor symptoms such as constipation, along with the presence of α-syn pathology in the enteric nervous system, have led to increasing interest in the gut-brain axis as a critical modulator of PD pathogenesis. Recent literatures reveal that gut microbiota dysbiosis can influence neurodegeneration through immune activation, intestinal barrier dysfunction, and altered production of microbial metabolites, including short-chain fatty acids, bile acids, lipopolysaccharides, and tryptophan-derived compounds. However, the precise molecular mechanisms by which these microbial factors modulate α-syn aggregation, propagation, and clearance remain incompletely understood. In this article, we review current clinical and experimental literature linking gut microbiota alterations to α-syn pathology, with particular emphasis on inflammatory signaling, microbial metabolites, and impaired proteostatic pathways that promote α-syn misfolding. We further integrate emerging concepts of "body-first" and "brain-first" PD subtypes and discuss proposed routes of α-syn transmission from the enteric to the central nervous system, including vagal, hematogenous, and immune-mediated pathways. By highlighting underexplored mechanistic connections between gut dysbiosis and α-syn biology, this review underscores the potential of microbiome-targeted strategies for early diagnosis and disease modification. A deeper understanding of gut-brain communication may ultimately enable personalized therapeutic approaches and reshape current paradigms of PD pathogenesis.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Benekos K, Katsanos A, Laspas P, et al (2026)

An Update and Overview of the Ocular and Extraocular Microbiome and Its Impact on Ophthalmic Care.

Advances in therapy [Epub ahead of print].

The microbiome has been described as the last human "organ" and is currently the topic of great research interest worldwide. The application of culture-independent methods, like 16S ribosomal next-generation sequencing, has offered researchers the opportunity to identify bacterial populations that were impossible to detect previously using conventional culture methods. Further standardization of these new approaches to characterizing the microbiome is desirable. The present review discusses the mounting evidence suggesting that alterations in the microbiome and microbial metabolites, such as short-chain fatty acids in the gut, mouth, and ocular surface, may play a key role in the pathogenesis of ocular pathologies such as ocular surface disease, glaucoma, uveitis, age-related macular degeneration, and diabetic retinopathy. Clarifying the probable role of the microbiome in ocular diseases would not only offer valuable insights into pathogenesis but could also enable the development of novel therapeutic approaches. As yet, microbial-based therapeutic applications in ophthalmology are limited. Nevertheless, recently emerging strategies utilizing probiotics and prebiotics, or even fecal transplantation to regulate microbiome composition, offer promising research avenues for developing future innovative therapies for ocular diseases. Further studies employing standardized methodological protocols are needed to ensure the reproducibility of results and to eventually unlock the precise links between the microbiome and the eye.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Alciati A, Cracò F, Burgio A, et al (2026)

Fibromyalgia and metabolic syndrome: prevalence, potential shared pathophysiological mechanisms and non-pharmacological treatment strategies.

Clinical and experimental rheumatology pii:23067 [Epub ahead of print].

Fibromyalgia (FM) is a chronic pain syndrome defined by widespread musculoskeletal pain, fatigue and sleep disturbances, frequently accompanied by metabolic disturbances. Among these, metabolic syndrome (MetS), a cluster of abdominal obesity, hypertension, dyslipidaemia and impaired glucose regulation, stands out because of its strong association with cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes. Recent studies suggest that MetS and its individual components, particularly obesity, are highly prevalent in FM populations, raising important clinical and pathophysiological questions.Both FM and MetS are associated with chronic low-grade inflammation, autonomic nervous system dysfunction, and dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. Moreover, environmental factors, particularly early-life stress, may increase vulnerability by triggering persistent neuroendocrine and immune alterations. These overlapping pathways not only predispose to comorbidity but also contribute to increased symptom burden and therapeutic complexity. Systematic screening for MetS in patients with FM may improve cardiovascular risk stratification and inform more comprehensive treatment strategies. This narrative review summarises current evidence on the comorbidity of FM with MetS and its individual components, highlighting their shared pathophysiology. It also explores the therapeutic potential of non-pharmacological strategies, including structured exercise, dietary interventions, and microbiome-targeted approaches, that address common underlying mechanisms and hold promise for improving long-term outcomes.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Meng X, Wu X, Sun H, et al (2026)

Maternal-Infant Gut Microbiota Transmission and the Early Origins of Metabolic Liver Diseases: Mechanisms and Interventional Opportunities.

Nutrition reviews pii:8687669 [Epub ahead of print].

Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease is associated with a growing global health burden with increasing prevalence in both adult and pediatric populations. Emerging evidence suggests that the origins of steatotic liver disease may trace back to early life, with the gut microbiota serving as a critical mediator in this developmental programming. This review synthesizes current knowledge on maternal-infant gut microbiota transmission and its role in shaping long-term liver health through the gut-liver axis. We examined key maternal factors, including delivery mode, feeding of breast milk, diet, metabolic status, and antibiotic exposure, that profoundly influence infant microbiota assembly. The critical window of microbiota establishment during the first 1000 days shapes intestinal barrier function, immune development, and metabolic pathways that persist into adulthood. Mechanistically, early dysbiosis contributes to metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease pathogenesis through multiple interconnected pathways, including compromised intestinal barrier integrity facilitating endotoxemia, altered short-chain fatty acid production affecting energy metabolism and inflammation, disturbed bile acid signaling disrupting metabolic homeostasis, and epigenetic modifications potentially shaping long-term susceptibility. We critically evaluated emerging microbiota-targeted interventional strategies during pregnancy and infancy, including probiotics, human milk oligosaccharide supplementation, and synbiotic approaches, highlighting their potential for disease prevention. This review uniquely integrates concepts of developmental origins with detailed gut-liver axis mechanisms, emphasizing the maternal-infant microbial continuum as an underexplored but promising target for preventing metabolic liver disease. While significant research challenges remain, particularly in establishing causality and developing personalized interventions, modulation of the early gut microbiome offers an innovative preventive strategy against the rising tide of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, potentially disrupting the intergenerational cycle of metabolic disease.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Wang L, Wang Q, Wolfe TM, et al (2026)

Technical and biological factors driving inter-individual body burden of arsenic species in murine models of human arsenic exposure.

Toxicological sciences : an official journal of the Society of Toxicology pii:8687690 [Epub ahead of print].

Arsenic is one of the most important environmental toxicants, requiring advanced analytical techniques to resolve individual species. There is little consensus on arsenic speciation methodology for in vivo studies. The objectives of this study were to generate a robust framework for arsenic speciation in murine models of human exposure and evaluate factors influencing the levels of arsenobetaine, inorganic arsenite, dimethylarsinate, monomethylarsonate, and inorganic arsenate resolved by HPLC-ICPMS. Enzyme-assisted digestion by papain vs. pepsin and maceration by bead beating vs. mechanical homogenization were evaluated using chemical standard spiking experiments. Dose-controlled mouse exposures to inorganic arsenite were conducted and species detected in urine and bladder tissue were compared. Species in stool, liver, and bladder were compared between groups of mice eating a standard vs. purified diet; fasted vs. unfasted mice; and conventional vs. germ-free mice. Finally, between-lab differences in HPLC-ICPMS instrumentation/quantification procedures were evaluated. These comparisons led to several important conclusions including: Significant conversion of inorganic arsenate to arsenite by papain, significant inorganic arsenate background in bead-beating lysing matrix, significant arsenobetaine in mice eating standard but not purified chow, significant correlation between species detected in urine and bladder, significant correlation of results between laboratories that differed in absolute quantification, and large inter-individual variability between mice of the same treatment group. Finally, diet type and the presence of a microbiome had the largest effect on arsenic species levels. Our results provide a benchmark for evaluating arsenic species in murine models, including adequate sample sizes for powering studies to avoid erroneous conclusions.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Hull RC, Liu Y, Cao Z, et al (2026)

Comorbid diabetes disease severity and microbial changes in patients with bronchiectasis: a combined analysis of data from the EMBARC, EMBARC-India, Australian, and BE-China registries.

The Lancet. Respiratory medicine pii:S2213-2600(26)00057-3 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Bronchiectasis and diabetes commonly coexist and are associated with immune dysfunction and increased susceptibility to infection. Although diabetes is associated with worse prognosis in cystic fibrosis-related bronchiectasis, data are scarce for its impact on non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis. This study aimed to characterise the impact of diabetes on clinical outcomes and microbial and inflammatory profiles in patients with bronchiectasis.

METHODS: This analysis comprised data from the European Bronchiectasis Registry (EMBARC), Respiratory Research Network of India (EMBARC-India), Chinese Bronchiectasis Registry (BE-China), and Australian Bronchiectasis Registry (ABR); 30 263 patients with CT-confirmed bronchiectasis in 33 countries were included in the analysis: 16 963 from EMBARC (Jan 12, 2015, to April 12, 2022), 2361 from EMBARC-India plus additional Asian countries (June 1, 2015, to Sept 1, 2017), 10 324 from BE-China (Jan 10, 2020, to March 31, 2024), and 615 from the ABR (March 7, 2016, to Sept 11, 2018). Clinical data were compared between patients with and without diabetes. Long-term outcome data were available in EMBARC and EMBARC-India. Microbiome and inflammatory profiles were characterised in a sub-cohort of EMBARC patients by sputum 16S rRNA sequencing (n=433) and serum Olink (n=479).

FINDINGS: 2487 (8·2%) of 30 263 patients with bronchiectasis had diabetes. Patients with diabetes had a higher prevalence of comorbidities than those without diabetes, including cardiovascular disorders (53·5% vs 21·8%, p<0·0001), asthma (27·5% vs 21·0%, p<0·0001), and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (34·3% vs 19·0%, p<0·0001). Patients with diabetes had more severe disease than those without diabetes, with higher Bronchiectasis Severity Index scores (8 [IQR 5-12] vs 7 [4-10], p<0·0001) and UK Medical Research Council (MRC) dyspnoea scores (p<0·0001) and more hospital admissions in the previous year (p<0·0001). After adjustment for confounders, outcomes were significantly worse in patients with diabetes than in those without diabetes, including more frequent exacerbations (incidence rate ratio [IRR] 1·18 [95% CI 1·09-1·28], p<0·0001), hospital admissions (IRR 1·57 [1·40-1·76], p<0·0001), and higher 5-year mortality (hazard ratio 1·80 [1·53-2·12], p<0·0001). The sputum microbiome was significantly altered in patients with diabetes compared to those without diabetes, with increased isolation of Enterobacteriaceae (p<0·0001), Moraxella catarrhalis (p=0·0035), and Haemophilus influenzae (p=0·046). In serum, Gal-4 and GDF-15, established biomarkers of disease severity and cardiovascular risk in diabetes, were significantly increased in patients with diabetes (Gal-4, p<0·0001; GDF-15, p=0·0019).

INTERPRETATION: Patients with diabetes and bronchiectasis are a high-risk population with more severe disease, worse outcomes, increased comorbidities, and increased risk of infections compared with patients without diabetes. These findings support inclusion of diabetes as a risk factor in individualised risk assessments for bronchiectasis.

FUNDING: European Respiratory Society, Armata, AstraZeneca, Boehringer Ingelheim, Chiesi, CSL Behring, GSK, Grifols, Insmed, Janssen, Lifearc, Roche, Verona Pharma, Zambon, National Natural Science Foundation of China, Innovation Program of the Shanghai Municipal Education Commission, Program of the Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Commission, Program of the Shanghai Shenkang Development Center, EU/European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations, Innovative Medicines Initiative, and Inhaled Antibiotics in Bronchiectasis and Cystic Fibrosis Consortium.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Shahvali N, Adibi M, Mohebi A, et al (2026)

Mesenchymal stem cell therapy for treatment of medication related osteonecrosis of the jaw (MRONJ): A systematic review.

Tissue & cell, 102:103489 pii:S0040-8166(26)00182-5 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw (MRONJ) is a significant adverse effect associated with antiresorptive and antiangiogenic therapies. Therapies utilizing mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) represent a promising regenerative strategy; however, conventional management methods have shown limited effectiveness. This systematic review aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of MSC-based interventions in preventing and treating MRONJ.

METHOD: A comprehensive literature search was conducted using PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science to identify studies published from 2011 to 2024. Studies examining MSCs therapy in the context of MRONJ were incorporated according to predefined inclusion and exclusion criteria.

RESULTS: Seventeen studies (6 clinical, 11 preclinical) met inclusion criteria. Preclinical models demonstrated that MSCs enhance angiogenesis and bone regeneration, providing mechanistic support for human application. Clinically, 80-90% of patients achieved complete mucosal healing with radiographic evidence of bone regeneration. However, due to species differences in oral microbiome and immunity, animal findings require confirmation in human trials.

CONCLUSION: This review integrates human clinical data with mechanistic insights from preclinical studies. Human evidence shows promising mucosal and bone regeneration, while animal studies elucidate underlying mechanisms-particularly angiogenesis and immunomodulation. Given that animal models cannot replicate the human oral immune environment, these findings should be interpreted as hypothesis-generating. MSC therapy represents a biologically sound but experimental strategy, warranting confirmation through randomized controlled trials.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Biber P, Muhammad AR, Hartinger T, et al (2026)

Elucidating the separate and synergistic impacts of ruminal and hindgut acidosis on fermentation and microbiome of dairy cows.

Journal of dairy science pii:S0022-0302(26)02840-7 [Epub ahead of print].

The aim of this study was to evaluate the short-term impacts of both subacute ruminal acidosis (SARA) and hindgut acidosis (HGA) on the ruminal and fecal fermentation and microbiome of dairy cows. The study was conducted as a change-over design using 9 rumen-cannulated Holstein cows (724 ± 79 kg body weight and 198 ± 74 d in milk). The SARA was induced by feeding a diet containing 65% concentrate (DM basis), and HGA was induced through daily abomasal infusion of 3 kg of starch (1:1 corn to wheat weight ratio). The evaluated treatments were 1) a control diet containing 40% concentrate (CON), 2) CON+HGA, 3) a diet containing 65% concentrate (SARA), and 4) SARA+HGA. Ruminal pH was measured every 15 min, and the fecal pH was measured 3 times per day (0, 6 and 12 h relative to feeding). Ruminal and fecal samples were collected in the morning before first feeding and were analyzed for microbiome through 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. Additionally, rumen and fecal samples were taken at 0, 6 and 12 h relative to feeding and were analyzed for volatile fatty acids (VFA) and lactate to evaluate postprandial effects of treatments. Results showed that changing from CON to SARA lowered ruminal pH and increased ruminal propionate, without affecting fecal VFA profile or pH. Compared with CON, SARA shifted the ruminal microbiome, decreased α diversity in the rumen and feces, and increased abundance of several taxa such as Succinivibrionaceae UCG-001 (OTU 2994), Lachnospiraceae (OTU 3043), and Acetitomaculum (OTU 80). The HGA decreased fecal pH, increased total fecal VFA at 12 h post-feeding, and increased fecal lactate and butyrate at the expense of acetate and propionate. In addition, HGA shifted the fecal microbiome and increased butyrate producing bacteria such as Lachnospiraceae (OTU 18), Blautia (OTU 508), Acetitomaculum (OTU 622), resulting in positive correlations between fecal butyrate and abundance of these taxa; however, family Ruminococcaceae (OTU 1580), and Christensenellaceae (OTU 550) decreased in feces and correlated negatively with fecal butyrate. Moreover, results showed that SARA in combination with HGA aggravates shifts of the fecal microbiome as revealed by further reductions of microbial α diversity indices and families Ruminococcaceae (OTU 1580) and Christensenellaceae (OTU 550) in cows receiving the SARA diet and abomasal starch infusion. Overall, new findings from this study reveal not only separate effects of SARA and HGA on ruminal and fecal fermentation but also show additive negative impacts particularly on fecal microbial diversity and increase in fecal butyrate and lactate. Such alterations in microbial profile increase the risk of creating niches for pathogens proliferation and fecal shedding.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Intze E, Schaubeck M, Arendt BM, et al (2026)

Mixed feeding and mode of birth modulate the effects of a hydrolyzed synbiotic formula on the gut microbiome in infants at risk of atopic disease.

Clinical nutrition ESPEN pii:S2405-4577(26)00434-1 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Intestinal colonization by microbial communities is important for infant health. Little knowledge about the effect of infant formula matrix (i.e. form of protein) on the infant microbiome, is available. The main aim of this study was to investigate how mode of birth, cessation of breastfeeding, and the formula matrix i.e. protein matrix of synbiotic infant formulas modulate intestinal colonization in infants.

METHODS: Stool microbiota profiles of 342 healthy term infants participating in a randomized controlled trial were studied. Infants received synbiotic infant formula manufactured from extensively hydrolyzed (eHF) or intact protein (control formula; CF) as exclusive formula feeding or as mixed feeding (MF) with human milk. Stool samples at 4 and 12 months of age were analyzed by 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing.

RESULTS: Phylogenetic profiles of the stool microbiota showed age-dependent maturation. Protein hydrolyzation had only minor effects on overall community types. However, compared to CF, eHF feeding was linked to a Bifidobacterium-dominated microbiota at 4 months of age in two subgroups: in infants born by Cesarean section and those who had received MF for less than 3 months.

CONCLUSION: In this comparison of two synbiotic infant formulas, the formula matrix based on hydrolyzed protein was linked to a Bifidobacterium-dominated community, dependent on birth and feeding mode. Because bifidobacteria are positively linked to infant health and allergy-prevention, further studies are needed to confirm these results and to investigate the effects on clinical outcomes.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Sun Q, Li X, Wu J, et al (2026)

Immune Checkpoint Inhibitor Resistance in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: An Updated View Through the Cancer-immunity Cycle.

Critical reviews in oncology/hematology pii:S1040-8428(26)00269-6 [Epub ahead of print].

Despite the transformative impact of immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), durable responses remain limited to a subset of patients. Resistance-either intrinsic or acquired-continues to undermine the full therapeutic potential of immunotherapy. The cancer-immunity cycle provides a useful conceptual scaffold to dissect the multistep requirements for effective antitumor immunity. Recent advances in single-cell technologies, spatial profiling, longitudinal immune monitoring, and real-world clinical datasets have uncovered additional layers of complexity, including non-canonical pathways involving tumor metabolism, stromal architecture, vascular remodeling, epigenetic plasticity, microbiome-immune crosstalk, and host-related determinants of response. In this review, we provide an updated and integrated synthesis of both primary and acquired resistance mechanisms across each phase of the cancer-immunity cycle. We emphasize pathways that have gained mechanistic or clinical relevance in recent NSCLC literature and consolidate them in an updated reference figure (Figure 1). To strengthen translational relevance, we additionally include a dedicated section on host-related determinants of ICI efficacy-including immunosenescence, performance status, comorbidity burden, systemic inflammation, body composition, and concomitant medications-and a stepwise summary of representative primary versus acquired mechanisms with NSCLC clinical anchors (Table 1). Our goal is to frame resistance not as a single lesion, but as a dynamic tumor-host system that must be mapped to inform biomarker development and rational combination strategies.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Gong J, Mei X, Jin Y, et al (2026)

Synergistic foliar titanium and soil organic fertilizer drive terpenoid-mediated microbiome assembly to restrict Cd/Pb uptake in Panax notoginseng.

Journal of hazardous materials, 512:142356 pii:S0304-3894(26)01334-8 [Epub ahead of print].

Achieving safe utilization of heavy metal-contaminated soils without compromising crop productivity represents a grand challenge for sustainable agriculture. Although foliar titanium (Ti) and soil organic fertilizers (OF) independently alleviate abiotic stress, it remains unclear whether and how aboveground Ti signaling coordinates with OF mediated rhizosphere processes to enhance crop productivity and restrict heavy metal accumulation through plant-metabolite-microbiome networks. Here, using Panax notoginseng as a model, the results showed that co-application of foliar Ti with soil OF significantly outperformed individual applications. This "top-down" strategy synergistically increased root biomass and saponin content (synergistic index > 1), while reducing root Cd and Pb concentrations by 46.60% and 47.23%, respectively. Mechanistically, soil OF established a functional rhizosphere foundation by enhancing nutrient bioavailability and enriching beneficial microbial taxa. Concurrently foliar Ti acted as a systemic trigger to reprogram plant metabolism, upregulating arginine and proline metabolic pathways in leaves and coinciding with enhanced diterpenoid biosynthesis in roots. Specifically, accumulated diterpenoids (forskolin and ingenol) functioned as selective semiochemicals, recruiting a specialized microbiome consortium with enhanced metal-resistant, growth-promoting, and nutrient-solubilizing bacteria (Sphingomonas, Rhodanobacter, Bacillus) and fungi (Penicillium, Aspergillus), while inhibiting the pathogen Ilyonectria. Consequently, this engineered rhizosphere microbiome may have contributed to rhizosphere-level Cd/Pb exclusion or immobilization, thereby decoupling root metal uptake from bulk soil metal pools. This study supports a novel "aboveground trigger-belowground support" framework in which Ti-induced metabolites promote the assembly of functional microbiomes that are further supported by OF. We propose a targeted biofortification strategy leveraging plant-metabolite-microbiome coordination for safe cultivation of crops.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Yang W, Li Z, Chen X, et al (2026)

Association between a gut microbiota-targeted dietary index and osteoarthritis/rheumatoid arthritis: a cross-sectional study.

Clinics (Sao Paulo, Brazil), 81:100995 pii:S1807-5932(26)00123-7 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Diet plays a key role in regulating the gut microbiota. This study aimed to investigate the association between the Dietary Index of the Gut Microbiome (DI-GM) ‒ a score designed to reflect the potential of a diet to support a healthy gut microbiota ‒ and different types of arthritis, an area where systematic studies remain scarce.

METHODS: Data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2007-2018 were analyzed using multivariable logistic regression, Restricted Cubic Spline (RCS) regression, and subgroup analyses to assess associations between DI-GM and Osteoarthritis (OA) and Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA).

RESULTS: A total of 6168 participants were included, among whom 506 had Osteoarthritis (OA) and 303 had Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA). Multivariable analyses showed no significant association between DI-GM and OA (p > 0.05), but significant inverse associations with RA across models (ORs 0.74, 0.64, and 0.74; all p < 0.05). Restricted cubic spline analysis detected no significant nonlinear relationships for either outcome. Subgroup analyses suggested potential associations within certain populations.

CONCLUSION: This cross-sectional study found an inverse association between the diet-based DI-GM score and RA, but no significant association with OA. Given the limitations of the cross-sectional design, the observed association is equally compatible with dietary changes resulting from RA diagnosis and management (reverse causality). As this study did not measure the gut microbiota, the role of the microbiome as a mediator remains speculative. Therefore, these results require confirmation in prospective studies that can account for reverse causation and directly assess the gut microbiome.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Deng X, Wang Y, Zhu H, et al (2026)

Metagenomic profiling of resistome and mobilome dynamics in diverse freshwater aquaculture modes.

Water research, 302:126133 pii:S0043-1354(26)00813-4 [Epub ahead of print].

The widespread presence of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) in aquaculture environments poses a growing threat to public health. However, comprehensive understanding of ARG distribution and transmission potential across different freshwater aquaculture modes remains limited. This study employed integrated short- and long-read metagenomic sequencing to characterize the resistome, mobilome, and associated microbial communities across three predominant freshwater aquaculture modes (grass carp, crayfish, and crab ponds), using water, sediment, and intestinal samples analyzed at both contig and metagenome-assembled genome (MAG) levels. The results revealed that aquaculture modes and environmental media jointly shaped microbial and ARG compositions. At the contig level, the crayfish system harbored the highest relative abundance of both ARGs and mobile genetic elements (MGEs), with gut samples consistently emerging as the dominant reservoir across all modes. A significant positive correlation between ARG and MGE alpha diversity indicated that the gut microbiome, particularly in crayfish, provides a selective environment that co-enriches resistance genes and their mobile carriers. High-risk core ARGs (Rank I) were at least 19 times more abundant in the crayfish gut than in any other compartment, underscoring the intestinal microbiome as a hotspot for clinically relevant resistance accumulation. At the MAG level, over half of the recovered MAGs met near-complete or high-quality thresholds, and approximately 38% of ARG-carrying MAGs were classified as multidrug-resistant (MDR). MDR MAG abundance was significantly higher in gut than in sediment and water samples, with the crayfish gut as the most enriched compartment. Critically, several crayfish-associated MDR MAGs affiliated with Klebsiella aerogenes carried virulence factor genes (VFGs) and exhibited ARG-MGE-VFG co-localization within prophage sequences, suggesting phage-mediated co-dissemination of resistance and virulence traits. These findings highlight the intestinal microbiome of aquaculture species as a critical hotspot for resistance dissemination and provide a scientific basis for evaluating freshwater aquaculture-associated ARG risks under the One Health framework.

RevDate: 2026-05-19
CmpDate: 2026-05-19

Xiang N, Liao T, Xie M, et al (2026)

Decoding coral resistance to eutrophication through the association of hyper‑efficient denitrifiers as key microbial allies.

Nature communications, 17(1):.

Coral reefs face a perilous future due to global climate change compounded by the increasing prevalence of local stressors. Prominent among these is nutrient pollution, particularly nitrate eutrophication, which disrupts the coral-algal symbiosis and escalates reef degradation. While microbial denitrification is hypothesized to mitigate nitrate stress, the mechanisms underlying coral resilience remain unknown. Studying Hong Kong's coral "reef oases" that persist under chronic hyper-eutrophication, we discovered that resilience is not mediated by diversity or abundance shifts in denitrifier genera but by the association with specific, hyper-efficient denitrifying populations within the dominant denitrifier genus Ruegeria. By integrating population genomics, subspecies-resolution metabarcoding (resolving both the entire Ruegeria community and the denitrifying sub-community), and direct isotope-based activity assays, we identified and validated putative denitrifying "specialist" populations. These specialists were significantly enriched in corals from high-nitrate waters and exhibited 10-fold higher denitrification rates in low-oxygen incubations, converting nitrate to inert N2 with superior efficiency compared to non-specialists. Our findings reveal that critical ecosystem-scale adaptations to anthropogenic change can occur through a unique association with specialized sub-genus populations, which may be missed in conventional microbiome surveys. As such, our work sheds light into why dominant denitrifying genera are ubiquitous, yet only certain corals thrive in eutrophic conditions. It also provides a framework for future studies delineating ecologically important host-associated microbes.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Hu R, Aronson HS, Weaver ME, et al (2026)

Organic carbon oxidation state shapes fermentative methanogenic microbiomes and controls greenhouse gas fluxes.

Nature communications pii:10.1038/s41467-026-73281-z [Epub ahead of print].

Organic compounds with a negative nominal oxidation state of carbon (NOSC) are thermodynamically recalcitrant in anaerobic ecosystems, but few studies have measured the influence of NOSC on carbon degradation rates, gaseous product yields, or microbiome composition. We amended anaerobic rice paddy sediment microcosms with water-soluble monomeric organic carbon compounds varying in NOSC. Consistent with thermodynamic and stoichiometric predictions, negative NOSC compounds are catabolized more slowly but produce more methane per mole of carbon. Negative NOSC microbiomes have higher alpha diversity, more syntrophs and methanogens, and fewer fermentative bacteria. Strikingly, fermentative bacterial taxa display genomically encoded NOSC catabolic preferences both in the lab and field. Negative NOSC-preferring fermenters have longer predicted doubling times, consistent with the thermodynamic recalcitrance of their preferred substrates. We propose that microbial NOSC catabolic preferences may reflect the thermodynamic niche of microorganisms and we anticipate that extending research on microbial catabolic preferences to a greater variety of organic carbon substrates and diverse microbiomes will improve our understanding of microbial carbon cycling and trait evolution.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Maziers N, Le Chatelier E, Plaza Oñate F, et al (2026)

Fecal microbiome of patients with ulcerative colitis reflects their phenotype and inflammatory level.

Scientific reports pii:10.1038/s41598-026-44895-6 [Epub ahead of print].

Inflammatory bowel diseases affect ever-increasing numbers of individuals worldwide. Alterations of the intestinal microbiome were reported for Crohn's disease and at relapse in Ulcerative Colitis (UC); they were not clearly detected in UC at remission. Here we report the characterization of the microbiome by quantitative metagenomics in a cohort of 121 individuals, composed of 65 UC adult patients in remission and 56 healthy controls. A cross-sectional comparison revealed substantial microbiome differences, patients in remission having lower microbiome richness and paucity of the Ruminococcus species driven enterotype. The observed microbiome alterations allowed robust classification of patients by intestinal species abundance, yielding an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.87 in a Receiver-Operator Characteristic (ROC) analysis. Loss of richness was linked to an aggressive UC phenotype and to the importance of past relapses; it was associated with a worse IBD quality of life score (IBDQ-36). Unexpectedly, onset of inflammatory bouts, as assessed by white blood cell count and fecal calprotectin levels, was associated with higher richness; in a longitudinal study of patients at high risk of disease flare, we observed a link between increasing gut microbiome richness over time and calprotectin level, in turn related to clinical inflammatory response and relapse.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Weng J, Hashizume T, BW Ying (2026)

Cleaning reshapes bacterial communities in public toilets through disturbance and random reassembly.

Scientific reports pii:10.1038/s41598-026-52725-y [Epub ahead of print].

Cleaning of public spaces for human activities is commonly employed and reduces the microbial load in these spaces. However, the mechanisms underlying changes in microbial community structure following cleaning remain poorly understood. As a pilot study, we investigated the bacterial community in public toilets before and after cleaning using 16S rRNA sequencing and computational simulations, as well as bacterial colony growth assays and metabolic functional prediction. The results revealed that cleaning initially imposes a strong disturbance on bacterial communities, followed by continuous stochastic loss and a concurrent influx of bacteria, resulting in changes in community structure. Culturable bacterial communities before and after cleaning showed equivalent growth properties, indicating that cleaning did not alter the original environment. Cleaning time was positively correlated with colony number but not with colony growth capacity, suggesting that bacteria surviving cleaning were fast-growing or highly abundant taxa. Metabolisms related to methane and to diverse environments showed increased contributions to survival after cleaning. Taken together, cleaning-mediated changes in bacterial community structure in public toilets were driven by a stochastic process that renewed bacterial diversity. This study provides new insights into the disturbance and recovery dynamics of the microbiome in public environments subjected to cleaning.

RevDate: 2026-05-19
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Ravikrishnan A (2026)

Unlocking the Metagenome: Pipeline for Microbiome Data Analysis.

Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.), 3006:1-23.

Metagenomic technologies have revolutionized our understanding of microbes in different spheres of life, revealing the massive diversity and complex functionalities of microbial communities across various environments. Shotgun metagenomics, which involves sequencing the DNA of all the organisms in a sample, is emerging as a powerful tool in assessing the microbial content. Unlike the traditional culturing approach, the shotgun metagenomic technology provides a comprehensive view of the entire microbial community, including potential functions that the organisms could be performing. In this chapter, we describe a typical bioinformatics workflow to generate the taxonomic profiles from metagenomic sequencing data and demonstrate a few basic statistical analyses that can be performed from this data to generate insights. In addition, we discuss the experimental and analytical considerations that must be taken into account while generating and making inferences from metagenomic data. Lastly, we provide insights on automating the workflow for consistent and reproducible large-scale analyses.

RevDate: 2026-05-19
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Yugandhar Reddy BS, Sripradha S, A Kumar (2026)

Targeted Metagenomics Using Next-Generation Sequencing Methods.

Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.), 3006:25-32.

Metagenomics allows the discovery of the full diversity of all microbes present in a given niche. The technique is very powerful and has allowed very significant advances delineating the role of the microbiome in several disciplines including health, agriculture, ecology, industry, etc. Here, we describe the method required for processing of samples for metagenomic analysis using Next-Gen sequencing.

RevDate: 2026-05-19
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Rangamaran VR, Sushmitha TJ, Tamilmani KK, et al (2026)

Exploring the Ocean's Microbial World: Techniques and Protocols for Microbiome Research.

Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.), 3006:33-46.

Marine microbiomes play a crucial role in oceanic ecosystems, influencing biogeochemical cycles, climate regulation, and marine biodiversity. Accurate characterization of these microbial communities requires standardized protocols for sample collection, processing, sequencing and data analysis. This chapter provides a comprehensive guide to essential methodologies for marine microbiome research including field sampling strategies, DNA and RNA extraction techniques, high-throughput sequencing approaches (such as 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing and metagenomics) and bioinformatics pipelines for data interpretation. Additionally, we discuss quality control measures, best practices for reproducibility, and challenges associated with marine microbiome profiling. By adopting standardized methodologies, researchers can generate reliable, comparable datasets that enhance our understanding of marine microbial ecology and its broader environmental implications.

RevDate: 2026-05-19
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Jiménez DJ, Díaz-García L, Aldakheel L, et al (2026)

Dilution-to-Stimulation: A Method for Selecting Polymer-Transforming Microbial Consortia.

Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.), 3006:75-81.

The utilization of liquid enrichment cultures for selecting microbial communities has been employed to recover and increase the abundance of desired microbes capable of thriving on specific carbon sources. This strategy facilitates the development of microbial consortia designed to serve as models for studying the eco-enzymology of particular metabolic processes. In this context, we introduce a top-down method referred to as "dilution-to-stimulation" to artificially select polymer-transforming microbial consortia from soil samples.

RevDate: 2026-05-19
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Kosmopoulos JC, K Anantharaman (2026)

Computational Microbial and Viral Ecology Analysis.

Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.), 3006:83-141.

The explosion in known microbial diversity in the last two decades has made it abundantly clear that microbes in the environment do not exist in isolation; they are members of communities. Accordingly, omics approaches such as metagenomics have revealed that interactions between diverse groups of community members such as archaea, bacteria, and viruses (bacteriophages) are common and have significant impacts on entire microbiomes. Thus, to have a well-developed understanding of microbes as they naturally exist in the environment, biological entities of all kinds must be studied together. While numerous protocols for metagenome analysis exist, comprehensive published protocols for the simultaneous analysis of viruses and prokaryotes together are scarce. Further, as bioinformatic methods for microbiology rapidly advance, existing metagenomic tools and pipelines require frequent re-evaluation. This ensures the adherence to best practices for microbiome and metagenomic data analysis. Here, we offer an expansive approach for the joint analysis of bulk sequence data from a mixed microbial community (metagenomes) and viral-sized fraction communities (viromes). This chapter serves as a beginner's-level guide for researchers with limited bioinformatics expertise who wish to engage in multiscale metagenome and virome analyses. We cover steps from initial study design to sequence read processing, metagenome assembly, quality control, virus identification, microbial and viral genome binning, taxonomic characterization, species-level clustering, and host-virus predictions. We also provide the bioinformatic scripts used in our workflow for reuse in one's own computational methods. Lastly, we discuss additional approaches a researcher can take after processing data with this workflow.

RevDate: 2026-05-19
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Bhusan KK, Bose T, A Dutta (2026)

Identifying Differential Network Properties and Driver Microbes in Microbial Association Networks Using CompNet and NetShift.

Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.), 3006:143-165.

This chapter describes CompNet and NetShift, two network analysis tools, which can help in comparison and analysis of microbial association networks. Biological interaction networks are basic representations of entities present in a biological system and their inter-relationships, which lies at the foundation of any modeling approaches. Inter-microbial associations define the community structure of a given microbiome and understanding these interaction networks are pivotal to modeling the microbiome. CompNet helps in the comparison of various network properties across multiple different microbial association networks that may represent communities inhabiting different/contrasting environments. NetShift helps in the identification of key microbes (driver organisms) in the network that can drive changes in community composition and interactions (network topology) characteristic of communities residing in different environments.

RevDate: 2026-05-19
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Sambamoorthy G, Ansari AF, NM Dixit (2026)

Estimating Effective Pairwise Interactions to Predict the Structures of Microbial Communities (EPICS).

Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.), 3006:167-174.

The engineering of multispecies microbial communities is important to applications in healthcare, biotechnology, and environmental sustainability. Predicting the structures of such communities requires knowledge of the interactions between the species involved. When high-order interactions are present, bottom-up approaches, which rely on the assembly of all possible subcommunities, become prohibitive because the number of such subcommunities scales exponentially with the number of species. Here, we present an alternative, top-down approach, EPICS, which requires the assembly of subcommunities whose number scales linearly with the number of species, hugely reducing experimental effort. EPICS estimates effective pairwise interactions between species, which subsume high-order interactions, using data from monocultures and leave-one-out subcommunities and predicts community structures. The method is efficient and scalable to large communities.

RevDate: 2026-05-19
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Roma Pi J, A Heinken (2026)

Personalized Constraint-Based Modeling of Microbial Communities from Metagenomic Data.

Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.), 3006:233-260.

High-throughput metagenomic sequencing techniques such as 16S rRNA and shotgun sequencing have enabled an unprecedented understanding of the structure and function of microbiome communities such as the human gut microbiome. Tailored dietary or therapeutic interventions targeting the microbiome could advance personalized medicine; however, predicting such interventions requires predictive systems biology methods. Constraint-Based Reconstruction and Analysis (COBRA) is a mechanistic systems biology approach that relies on detailed genome-scale reconstructions of a target organism's metabolism. A resource of genome-scale reconstructions of human microbes, AGORA, and its expansion in size and scope, AGORA2, have been developed through a semi-automated refinement pipeline, DEMETER. A user-friendly analysis pipeline, mgPipe, allows building and interrogating personalized models of microbiome communities from AGORA and AGORA2. Through sample-specific simulations, mgPipe can stratify patients and controls by the distinct metabolic capabilities of their microbiomes, starting from the processed metagenomic sequencing data. Building on this functionality, the protocol provides a comprehensive workflow for the contextualization of metagenomics data through personalized, mechanistic modeling. Comprehensive tutorials for the DEMETER and mgPipe workflows are presented, which will enable both systems biologists and microbiome scientists to contextualize metagenomic data and perform mechanistic simulations of diet-microbiome-host interactions.

RevDate: 2026-05-19
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Nawaz A, Schaefer JL, F Centler (2026)

Dynamic Simulation of Growth and Cross-Feeding in Microbiomes with μbialSim.

Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.), 3006:317-330.

Microbial cells in natural environments are typically embedded in microbial communities consisting of few to many different species. Close proximity and high diversity of neighboring cells facilitate manifold interactions on several layers, from substrate competition, exchange of genetic material, to metabolic cross-feeding. The complexity of these ecological interaction networks makes microbiomes notoriously difficult to study. While microbiome dynamics can routinely be elucidated by meta-omics technologies, pinpointing mechanisms driving these observed dynamics remains a challenge. Mechanistic mathematical modeling with its ability to focus on individual interactions and exploring their isolated impact on overall dynamics has emerged as a suitable tool in this context. Here, we use μbialSim, an open-source simulator that extends the Flux Balance Analysis approach to microbial communities, considering substrate competition and metabolic cross-feeding but neglecting any other microbial interactions. Assuming a well-mixed bioreactor environment, simulated trajectories enable the analysis of growth behavior of individual microbiome members, dynamics of intracellular enzymatic fluxes across all species, as well as the analysis of cross-feeding behavior and how it changes over time. The MATLAB implementation of μbialSim is available from https://github.com/fcentler/microbialSim .

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Zhao T, Li B, Liu Y, et al (2026)

Enterococcus hirae QT4713-derived dopamine ameliorates intestinal inflammation and MPTP-induced Parkinson's disease in mice.

NPJ Parkinson's disease pii:10.1038/s41531-026-01392-x [Epub ahead of print].

Gut microbiota dysbiosis contributes to Parkinson's disease (PD) pathology by altering dopamine metabolism in the gut-brain axis. Although probiotics and other functional strains have been proposed as microbiome-based interventions, few naturally occurring gut microbes show therapeutic potential for PD. Here, we isolated Enterococcus hirae QT4713 (QT4713) from the hypoxic, low-pressure Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (4713 m altitude). Whole-genome sequencing revealed that QT4713 harbors a tyrosine decarboxylase gene (TyrDc), enabling conversion of L-tyrosine to dopamine in vitro. In mice, QT4713 enhanced antioxidant enzyme activity, reduced inflammatory mediators, reshaped gut microbial composition, and promoted short-chain fatty acid production. Metabolomic analyses indicated activation of L-tyrosine metabolism, with increased L-DOPA and dopamine levels in the colon and feces, accompanied by improved motor performance. In an MPTP-induced PD mouse model, QT4713 alleviated motor and gastrointestinal dysfunction, reduced oxidative and inflammatory damage, and attenuated dopaminergic neuron loss. QT4713 also increased dopamine and tyrosine levels in the striatum. Extending beyond an acute toxin model, QT4713 partially rescued PD-like phenotypes in TMEM175 knockout mice, preserving tyrosine hydroxylase-positive neurons in the substantia nigra. Together, these findings suggest that QT4713 can mitigate gastrointestinal disturbances and other PD-related deficits, consistent with combined effects on catecholamine-related metabolism and gut microbiota remodeling.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Chen R, Luo S, Feng Y, et al (2026)

Functional restructuring of the global soil microbiome under multiple stressors.

Nature communications pii:10.1038/s41467-026-73231-9 [Epub ahead of print].

Microbes, as the planet's most abundant and diverse organisms, drive soil functions globally and are vulnerable to environmental stressors triggered by global change. Yet, knowledge regarding the impacts of multiple environmental stressors on their functional profiles as well as the consequences for soil functionality largely remains unknown. Here, we analyze two global-scale datasets including information on soil metagenomics and multiple environmental stressors. We find that across terrestrial ecosystems worldwide, up to 60% of all functional genes significantly shift when soil microbes experience the high-level of concurrent stressors. In this regard, the relative abundances of genes involved in microbial growth are negatively linked to the increasing number of stressors. Conversely, those genes linked to stress resistance and energy production exhibit positive responses. Taken together, our findings highlight a significant restructuring of global soil functional microbiomes in response to multiple environmental stressors. Consequently, such restructuring drives community-level shifts in matter and energy reallocations, thereby impacting the maintenance of soil functionality under the projected global change.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Bamberger T, Muller E, Algavi YM, et al (2026)

Mapping the canine gut microbiome: insights from the Dog Aging Project.

Nature communications pii:10.1038/s41467-026-73193-y [Epub ahead of print].

Companion dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) offer a unique model for studying the gut microbiome and its relation to aging due to their cohabitation with humans, sharing similar environments, diets, and healthcare practices. Here, we present the Dog Aging Project (DAP) Precision cohort, a large population-wide study of the canine gut microbiome. This cohort encompasses over 900 dogs of diverse breeds, environments, and demographics living across the United States. Coupling fecal shotgun metagenomic sequencing with phenotypic and environmental surveys and clinical lab tests, we explore the intricate relationships between microbiome composition, aging, and key factors such as health and living conditions. Our analyses identify multiple factors associated with microbiome composition, including dietary preferences such as commercial versus home cooked nutrition, and behaviors such as coprophagy (feces eating). In addition, we find age-associated gradual shifts in microbiome composition, supporting the development of a metagenomics-based population-level model for canine age prediction based on microbial signatures. We further examined which age-associated microbial patterns observed in humans are recapitulated in dogs by comparing our cohort with the Lifelines-DEEP cohort. Overall, these findings offer insights into the role the gut microbiome plays in our four-legged companions, with potential implications for veterinary medicine and translational aging research.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Wiest IC, Dreikhausen L, Keller R, et al (2026)

Differential effects of prior versus concomitant Steroid and Antibiotic Treatment on Immunotherapy Efficacy - A Pooled Analysis of the RAMONA, INTEGA, OPTIM, ELDORANDO, FORCE, TITAN-RCC and TITAN-TCC Trials of the German AIO Study Group.

British journal of cancer [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: We explored the association of immune-related adverse events (irAE), along with prior and concomitant antibiotic and steroid use, on oncological outcomes following immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) treatment in various solid tumours.

METHODS: Pooled data from seven trials on ICI therapy across multiple cancer types (head and neck, non-small cell lung cancer, gastroesophageal junctional adenocarcinoma, oesophageal, renal cell, and urothelial carcinoma) was analysed, focusing on overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) and antibiotic or steroid use before and during the study.

RESULTS: Of 693 patients, 80 used steroids and 52 used antibiotics prior to the study, while 360 and 331, respectively, used them concomitantly. Lack of prior antibiotic use was associated with longer OS (No vs. Yes: HR 0.552, 95%-CI 0.370-0.822, p = 0.0035) and PFS (No vs. Yes: HR 0.703, 95%-CI 0.485-1.019, p = 0.0625), whereas concomitant antibiotic use had no such effect. Patients with concomitant steroid use demonstrated longer PFS (No vs. Yes: HR 1.359, 95%-CI 1.091-1.693, p = 0.0061).

DISCUSSION: Our study confirmed associations between antibiotic and steroid use and ICI efficacy in cancer. Prior, but not concomitant, antibiotic use was linked to reduced OS, supporting the role of microbiome diversity in tumour response. Concomitant steroid use was associated with improved PFS, potentially reflecting its link to irAE occurrence.

RevDate: 2026-05-19

Cheng S, Hao X, Liu S, et al (2026)

Integrated multi-omics analysis reveals a gut microbiota-tryptophan metabolism axis contributes to sex differences in a β-aminopropionitrile-induced aortic dissection mouse model.

Biology of sex differences pii:10.1186/s13293-026-00925-6 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Sex differences in aortic dissection (AD) have been consistently reported in epidemiological studies and experimental mouse models, with males showing markedly higher susceptibility. However, the molecular basis underlying these sex-specific differences remains insufficiently understood.

METHODS: Three-week-old male and female C57BL/6J mice were administered 0.4% β-aminopropionitrile (BAPN) in drinking water for 28 d to induce AD. After the induction period, fecal samples, serum, and aortic tissues were collected from all surviving animals. Integrated analyses included strand-specific transcriptomic sequencing of aortic tissues, untargeted serum metabolomics, and full-length 16 S rRNA sequencing of fecal samples to characterize sex-related differences across transcriptomic, metabolic, and microbiome layers. Inter-omics correlations were further assessed using bioinformatic approaches. Furthermore, in vivo experiments were conducted to validate the impact of key metabolites on the progression of AD.

RESULTS: Female mice exhibited significantly lower susceptibility to BAPN-induced AD, including reduced rates of aortic rupture, lower incidence of AD or aneurysm (AAD), and attenuated aortic dilation. Transcriptomic analysis revealed that female non-dissected mice (FeNonAD) displayed diminished induction of inflammation-related genes and lower predicted immune cell infiltration. Metabolomic profiling revealed significant elevations of tryptophan-indole pathway metabolites-such as indolepyruvate, indole-3-acetic acid, and indolepropionic acid-in both FeNonAD and AAD groups. Microbiome analysis further revealed a higher relative abundance of tryptophan-metabolizing taxa, particularly key Clostridium species, in the intestinal tract of FeNonAD mice, accompanied by significant upregulation of key functional genes (tyrB and aspC) associated with indolepyruvate synthesis. Weighted gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA)-based integration identified strong negative correlations between indolepyruvate and indole-3-acetic acid sodium salt levels and aortic gene modules linked to immune-inflammatory activation. Further in vivo experiments demonstrated that treatment with indolepyruvate delayed AD progression in male mice.

CONCLUSION: This study highlights a central "gut microbiota-tryptophan metabolism-aortic inflammation" axis that contributes to sexual dimorphism in BAPN-induced AD. These findings provide new molecular insights into sex-specific disease mechanisms and offer a conceptual basis for developing sex-tailored diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Al Achkar N, Privitera GF, Arena D, et al (2026)

Exogenous microbial consortia modulate rhizosphere microbiome and yield of grafted tomato grown in the mediterranean greenhouse.

BMC plant biology pii:10.1186/s12870-026-08962-4 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: The adoption of sustainable agricultural practices for intensive horticultural production could determine less damage to the ecosystem is a fundamental need increasing worldwide. In this trial the effect of two commercial microbial consortia, applied on two hybrid rootstocks of tomato grafted by two scions, were evaluated both on yield components and on the compositions of the rhizosphere microbiome. The rhizosphere was collected from each grafting combination, in both treated and non-treated plots. Microbiome DNA extracted was then sequenced by amplifying two specific regions ITS1-1F for fungus and 16SV34 for bacteria.

RESULTS: At the morphological level, the effect of microbial consortia application on the total production and yield showed to be highly dependent on the grafting combination, yield increased by 9.1, 10.3 and 12.6% in treated plots of Auto S2, R1/S1 and R1/S2 respectively but registered a reduction of 22.4% in NG.S2 and 9.3% in R2/S2 plots. The metagenomic sequencing revealed that fungal community composition was significantly influenced by both grafting combinations and microbial treatments (especially on the relative abundance of major phyla; Ascomycota and Basidiomycota), whereas bacterial communities exhibited stronger shifts in response to microbial consortia application than to grafting combinations. Correlation analysis between the rhizosphere microbial taxa, yield, and root weight highlighted significant associations supporting the potential of combined use of these practices. Notably, although the inoculated microorganisms were detected at low abundance or were not detectable in treated soils, pronounced shifts in the overall microbiome structure were observed, suggesting indirect yet significant ecological effects of the consortia.

CONCLUSION: This study demonstrates that microbial consortia and grafting synergistically enhance tomato productivity and modulate rhizosphere microbial communities in the monoculture degraded soil under intensive Mediterranean greenhouse conditions. These findings advance current understanding of plant genotype × microbial consortium interactions by demonstrating that microbial inoculant relevant effects are highly modulated by plant genotype and can indirectly restructure rhizosphere microbial assemblages, contributing to the development of more sustainable and resilient horticultural systems.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Shi Y, Rao Z, Liu C, et al (2026)

Microbial enterotype is linked to episodic and working memories via brain function in the parietal and occipital cortices.

BMC biology pii:10.1186/s12915-026-02635-2 [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Classification of human gut microbiome into distinct enterotypes based on gut microbial community composition has provided an attractive framework for population stratification. While empirical evidence indicates that microbial enterotype is related to brain function and memory, the neural processes underlying this interaction remain to be further characterized.

RESULTS: In 510 healthy young adults, we used 16S rDNA amplicon sequencing to perform enterotyping, acquired resting-state functional MRI data to calculate brain functional measures, and assessed both episodic and working memories. Inter-enterotype differences in brain functional measures were examined, followed by performance of correlation and mediation analyses to disentangle the potential associations between enterotype, brain function, and memory. We found significant differences in multiple brain functional measures in the parietal and occipital cortices across Bacteroides, Prevotella, and Ruminococcaceae enterotypes. Moreover, these differential brain functional measures were correlated with both episodic and working memories, and further mediated the relationship between enterotype and memory.

CONCLUSIONS: Our findings not only establish brain function as the mediating factor between enterotype and memory, but also hold translational potential for informing novel treatment for cognitive dysfunction via targeting the microbiota-gut-brain axis.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Zia B, AlKaabi J, Agha A, et al (2026)

The diabetes exposome: interplay of environmental and genetic determinants in diabetes.

Human genomics pii:10.1186/s40246-026-00987-y [Epub ahead of print].

Diabetes mellitus arises from complex interactions between biological susceptibility and diverse environmental influences that extend beyond traditional "genes versus lifestyle" models. The exposome is defined as the aggregate of non-genetic environmental exposures and their biological consequences across the life course. It provides a systems-level framework to evaluate this interaction, spanning chemical, physical, social, and behavioral domains while integrating them with internal molecular responses to decode how environments shape metabolic health. Emerging assessment strategies, including exposome-wide association studies (ExWAS), high-resolution mass spectrometry-based biomonitoring, geospatial and remote-sensing platforms, and wearable exposure sensors, enable characterization of multi-exposure profiles rather than single agents in isolation. Within exposome domains, air pollution, endocrine-disrupting chemicals, food-borne contaminants, exposome characteristics of the built environment, and chronic psychosocial stress have each been shown to contribute to the development and progression of both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. These diverse exposures often share common pathogenic mechanisms of chronic low-grade inflammation, oxidative and nitrosative stress, alterations in the gut microbiome, and epigenetic changes that ultimately lead to glucose dysregulation. Recent progress in metabolomics, lipidomics, and epigenomics is elucidating the "internal exposome," providing molecular fingerprints that encode prior exposure and detect early metabolic disruption. This integrated approach argues for a paradigm adjustment in diabetes prevention from behavior-centered strategies to those that also target upstream environmental determinants. Exposomic information can improve risk prediction, inform precision public health and medical practice, and inform policy regarding air pollution, chemical use, urban planning, and food systems. This review summarizes the current state of knowledge of the exposome in diabetes, describing its conceptual underpinnings, major tools of assessment, major epidemiologic findings, and biological mechanisms, and identifying the key challenges and opportunities for exposomics to inform effective approaches to diabetes prevention and planetary health.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Jing Y, Liu S, Leng L, et al (2026)

Microbiota transplantation and multi-omics profiling integration unveil the mechanism of Alistipes communis-driven abdominal fat deposition in chickens.

Journal of animal science and biotechnology, 17(1):.

BACKGROUND: Emerging evidence highlights strong correlations between the cecal microbiome and abdominal fat deposition (AFD) in chickens. However, the specific microbial species driving this process remain unclear. This study aims to identify the key microbe and elucidate its underlying mechanism in regulating chicken AFD.

RESULTS: First, cecal microbiota transplantation confirmed a causal relationship between the cecal microbiota and AFD. Subsequently, metagenomic and metatranscriptomic integrations identified Alistipes communis as a key microbe implicated in AFD. Finally, in vivo gavage integrated with multi-omics revealed that A. communis enhances AFD by disrupting host tryptophan and histidine metabolism. This was evidenced by the elevated concentrations of amino acid metabolism-related metabolites, including L-phosphoarginine and spermine in the cecum.

CONCLUSIONS: This study provides direct evidence that the cecal microbiome serves as a key driver in chicken AFD and identifies A. communis as a critical AFD regulator, offering valuable insights into the gut microbiome's role in host obesity.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Garvey K, Harris JK, Furuta GT, et al (2026)

Minimally invasive capsule-string device enables spatially resolved microbiome profiling across the upper gastrointestinal tract.

Gut microbes, 18(1):2675764.

Regional variation in the human gastrointestinal microbiome remains difficult to characterize because existing sampling methods either rely on invasive endoscopy or stool, which poorly reflects the upper gut. We evaluated a minimally invasive capsule-string device capable of collecting luminal and mucosal material from the esophagus, stomach, duodenum, and jejunum during natural transit. In healthy adults, compartment-level samples were anatomically localized using pH, bile staining, and string length, and microbial communities were profiled by 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The device was well tolerated and consistently recovered sufficient biomass from all upper GI regions. Distinct microbial signatures were evident across compartments, with the strongest differences observed between proximal (esophageal and gastric) and small-intestinal communities. Although the individual host exerted the dominant influence on the overall community structure, a reproducible regional signal persisted after accounting for between-person variation. These findings demonstrate that capsule-string sampling provides reliable access to spatially resolved upper GI microbiota without endoscopy. This approach enables more precise mapping of gut microbial organization in vivo and creates new opportunities for longitudinal, mechanistic, and disease-focused studies of host‒microbiome interactions in regions that have historically been inaccessible.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Menadi S, E Cacan (2026)

Synergistic Anticancer Effects of Akkermansia muciniphila Combined With 5-Fluorouracil Through BAX/BCL2 Dependent Apoptosis in Colorectal Cancer Cells.

Cell biochemistry and function, 44(5):e70234.

Colorectal cancer (CRC) continues to be one of the deadliest cancers worldwide, mainly due to late diagnosis, chemoresistance, and the complex interactions within the tumor microenvironment. Recent studies suggest that the gut bacterium Akkermansia muciniphila plays a key role in maintaining intestinal health and may influence the effectiveness of cancer therapies. Therefore, the main aim of this study was to explore whether a lyophilized form of A. muciniphila could support CRC treatment. First, we analyzed A. muciniphila abundance in healthy, adenoma, and CRC tissues using public datasets. Next, CRC cell lines (HT29, HCT116, and SW620) and normal stromal cells (Hs738 St/Int) were treated with increasing doses of the bacterial extract, alone and with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). Then, cell viability measured by MTT assay, apoptosis by BAX/BCL2 expression via RT-qPCR, and physicochemical properties by zeta potential analysis. The results showed a marked reduction of A. muciniphila abundance in CRC samples, with an early decline from healthy to adenoma tissues and a slight recovery in advanced tumors. In vitro, the extract demonstrated dose-dependent cytotoxicity toward cancer cells, with HT29 showing strong sensitivity at low doses, HCT116 responding at higher concentrations, and SW620 exhibiting greater resistance. Importantly, the extract was well tolerated by normal cells, unlike 5-FU. Combining the extract with 5-FU resulted in a synergistic effect, indicating the possibility of reducing 5-FU dosage to limit its toxicity. The extract significantly upregulated BAX, downregulated BCL2, and displayed strong negative zeta potential, supporting enhanced apoptotic activation and selective interaction with cancer cell membranes. These findings suggest that A. muciniphila and its derived products may serve as promising adjuncts in personalized microbiome-based CRC therapy.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Ponsero AJ, Bahcivanci B, Hayhoe A, et al (2026)

The human gut microbiome across the life course.

FEBS letters [Epub ahead of print].

Across the human lifespan, the gut microbiome exhibits considerable inter-individual variation. However, individuals within the same age group often share characteristic compositional and functional patterns shaped by factors such as early microbial seeding, lifelong environmental exposures, and age-related physiological changes. Birth and early feeding establish the initial gut microbiome, with maternal transmission and milk-derived substrates typically favoring Bifidobacterium. As infants transition to solid foods and experience increasing social and environmental exposures, the microbiome undergoes substantial restructuring throughout childhood and adolescence. In adulthood, functional redundancy underpins stability despite routine perturbations; later life brings greater compositional uniqueness, with some profiles losing core taxa and accommodating opportunistic species, whereas others, particularly healthy older adults and centenarians, retain distinctive metabolic capacities that may buffer inflammaging. Efforts to build microbiome "aging clocks" highlight potential to index biological age, but progress remains constrained by technical and methodological limitations and is still maturing. This review synthesizes current evidence and identifies priorities for developing microbiome-informed, life-stage-tailored interventions.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Aware C, Woods C, Khodakivskyi P, et al (2026)

Stroke-induced gut microbiome dysbiosis accelerates Alzheimer's disease progression.

Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism : official journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism [Epub ahead of print].

Stroke survivors face an elevated risk of developing Alzheimer's disease (AD), yet the biological mechanisms linking these conditions remain poorly defined. Here, we show that a stroke-induced gut microbiome is a key driver of AD-related pathology. Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) from stroke patients into young triple-transgenic Alzheimer's disease (3xTg-AD) mice accelerated tau phosphorylation, increased neuroinflammation, and disrupted metabolic homeostasis in both the brain and gut, compared with FMT from healthy donors. Mice receiving stroke-derived microbiota exhibited persistent, donor-specific dysbiosis and broad metabolic reprogramming involving redox balance, nucleotide metabolism, and energy pathways in cecal contents and brain tissue. These metabolic disturbances were accompanied by widespread and region-specific transcriptional changes revealed by single-cell spatial transcriptomics, including glial activation, impaired neuron-glia communication, and dysregulation of mitochondrial, amyloid-processing and inflammatory pathways across cortical and hippocampal regions. Collectively, these findings identify post-stroke gut dysbiosis as a mechanistic contributor to heightened neurodegenerative vulnerability and AD risk, highlighting the gut-brain axis as a potentially modifiable target for preventing post-stroke dementia.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Deriouich M, Dompmartin A, JM L'Orphelin (2026)

Ultraviolet Radiations Impact on the Skin-Brain Axis: A Literature Review of our Current Knowledge.

Photodermatology, photoimmunology & photomedicine, 42(3):e70097.

BACKGROUND: Sunlight is essential for vitamin D synthesis and contributes to mood regulation, but it is also a major risk factor for skin aging and carcinogenesis. While the cutaneous and immune effects of ultraviolet radiation are well documented, its potential impact on brain function remains poorly understood. This review aims to synthesize current evidence on the effects of ultraviolet exposure on the central nervous system, with a particular focus on photoimmunological mechanisms and skin-derived signaling pathways.

METHODS: We conducted a narrative review of experimental and clinical studies investigating the systemic and neurological consequences of UV exposure. Findings from photodermatology, immunology, neuroscience, and microbiome research were integrated to examine potential skin-brain interactions.

RESULTS: UV exposure induces systemic inflammatory responses and immunosuppression, alters the skin microbiome, and modulates circulating neuroactive mediators. These processes are associated with changes in neurotransmitter systems, neuroplasticity, and brain structure in both animal models and human studies. Emerging evidence supports the existence of indirect pathways linking UV-induced skin and immune responses to central nervous system function, including immune and microbiota-related mechanisms.

CONCLUSION: Collectively, available data suggest that UV radiation may influence brain function indirectly through interconnected skin, immune, and microbiota pathways. As interest in balanced and "healthy" sun exposure increases, further interdisciplinary research is needed to clarify the neurological consequences of UV exposure and to assess its potential implications in photodermatology and photomedicine.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Xu H, Xu B, Wang H, et al (2026)

Lifestyle Modulation of Xenobiotic Stress: Aerobic Exercise Attenuates Nanoplastic-Associated Neuroendocrine Dysfunction via a Gut-Ovary-Brain Continuum.

FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, 40(10):e71891.

Xenobiotic stress can disrupt neuroendocrine function, yet whether a modifiable lifestyle factor can alter internal burden and downstream toxicity remains unclear. Here, adult female zebrafish were exposed to polystyrene nanoplastics (NPs; 80 nm; 1.0 mg/L) for 21 days, with or without moderate aerobic exercise (AE; 12 cm/s, 20 min/day). NPs exposure alone caused significant ovarian accumulation of particle-like structures (TEM), elevated oxidative stress, increased follicular apoptosis (TUNEL), and disrupted reproductive hormones (E2, FSH, LH). It also induced anxiety- and depression-like behaviors in novel tank and shoaling tests, accompanied by elevated cortisol and altered monoamine (NE, 5-HIAA) levels. In contrast, concurrent AE markedly attenuated these effects: it reduced ovarian particle burden, improved antioxidant enzyme activities (SOD, POD), restored ovarian histoarchitecture, and normalized endocrine and neuroendocrine measures. These changes were supported by partial recovery of ovarian (ESR1, cyp19a1a, AMH) and brain (BDNF, TPH2) transcript levels. Gut microbiome profiling revealed that AE counteracted NPs-associated dysbiosis, enriching beneficial taxa, including Akkermansia and Lachnospiraceae_NK4A136_group. Predictive functional inference and correlation analyses linked these microbial shifts to enhanced fatty acid and tryptophan metabolic potential, which correlated with neuroendocrine recovery. Together, these data support a working model in which AE acts as an exposure modifier, coupling host physiology and microbiome-associated metabolic capacity to mitigate NPs-induced neuroendocrine dysfunction via a gut-ovary-brain continuum. Targeted metabolomics and causal microbiota perturbation will be needed to validate specific mediators.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Nawaz Y, Munir S, Aslam S, et al (2025)

The Bacterial Role in the Progression of Breast Cancer through Mechanism of Gene Action: Future Prospects with Existing Studies.

Current genomics, 26(6):458-468.

BACKGROUND: Breast cancer is the main cause of death for women, even with major improvements in treatment. Through processes like DNA damage, estrogen metabolism, and immunological regulation, bacterial populations have been shown to have an impact on breast cancer development in recent studies.

OBJECTIVES: This review aimed to examine and evaluate current research on the involvement of bacteria in breast cancer progression, with an emphasis on gene action mechanisms and potential future treatments targeting the microbiome.

METHODS: A thorough literature analysis was carried out to identify pertinent research published between 1989-2024 across various databases, including PubMed, Google Scholar, Google, and Scopus.

RESULTS: Bacterial dysbiosis in the gut and breast tissue contributes to the progression of breast cancer through different pathways. Double-strand breaks in DNA are linked to various bacteria, like Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Helicobacter pylori, and Fusobacterium, which contribute to genomic instability. Breast cancers are influenced by hormones that are influenced by gut microbiota, namely the estrobolome, which regulates estrogen levels. Bacteria also impact immune responses by preventing anti-tumor immunity. These results suggest that restoring microbial balance to specific bacterial taxa may open up new treatment options. Different genes may contribute to variations, including an increase in regulatory T (Treg) cells, while FOXP3+ T cells are linked to shorter relapse-free survival. Understanding the microbiota's role in DNA damage, hormone regulation, and immune modulation is important.

CONCLUSION: Bacteria contribute significantly to the development of breast cancer through gene-level processes. Probiotics, immunomodulatory techniques, and microbiome-targeted treatments are potential future developments that could improve therapy effectiveness and reduce resistance.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Xiang T, Xiao S, Yang C, et al (2026)

Tryptophan-Restricted Intermittent Diet Alleviates Estrogen Deficiency-Induced Osteoporosis via Regulating Coupling Effects of "Gut-Bone" Axis.

International journal of biological sciences, 22(9):4784-4805.

Osteoporosis (OP) is a chronic and severe skeletal metabolic disorder resulting from excessive bone erosion activity and compromised bone formation. Emerging evidence highlights that the "gut-bone" axis plays a critical role in maintaining bone homeostasis via modulating gut microbiota and relevant metabolites. Individually, diet-derived tryptophan acts as one of the primary environmental factors that modulate the microbiota-bone crosstalk. Nevertheless, the promising modulatory mechanism of the "diet-microbiome-bone" axis remains unknown during OP progression. In this regard, the study focused on the dominant role of tryptophan-restricted intermittent diet during estrogen deficiency-induced OP. Upon these findings, micro-computed tomography (μCT) evaluation and histomorphometric analysis have confirmed that treatment with tryptophan-restricted intermittent diet effectively mitigated bone loss and improved bone microarchitecture. To unravel the underlying mechanism, we performed 16S rDNA gene sequencing and untargeted metabolomics to confirm the alteration of microbial community composition and metabolite profiles. Additionally, biotin was further identified as a significant microbiota-derived metabolite involved in M1 macrophage polarization and mature osteoclast apoptosis when administered with tryptophan-restricted intermittent diet. Thus, we summarized that treatment with tryptophan-restricted intermittent diet could perform a protective function during OP via modulating the coupling effects of gut microbiota and bone homeostasis, which may provide a potential therapeutic strategy for OP.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Louise Jespersen M, Kjærgaard Munk K, Fjermedal S, et al (2026)

A Hadza-enriched Prevotella/Segatella xyloglucanase shows sequence conservation and functional specialization.

Gut microbes reports, 3(1):2673265.

Bacteria can adapt to their environment through changes in their genetic material. A large proportion of gut bacteria are shaped by host-specific diet, including complex carbohydrates. The bacterial abundance, genetic content within the same bacterial species, and sequence-level variation in genes encoding similar carbohydrate-processing enzymes may therefore vary across hosts with different diets. We previously found that the abundance of diet-degrading genes varies between hominid host populations from Tanzania. We therefore hypothesized that, in addition to these abundance differences, selective pressure could act on individual gene sequences. Here, we investigated Tanzanian hominid gut microbiome differences at the taxonomic, genetic, structural, and functional levels. We analyzed 15,146 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) spanning 1563 species and identified one species with striking host-associated separation. In particular, sequence variation in a xyloglucanase-encoding gene correlated strongly with the host population. This gene was highly conserved in the Hadza population, suggesting a role in the processing of diet-associated polysaccharides. Sequence differences and structural modeling revealed amino acid substitutions near the catalytic site, and biochemical assays using xyloglucan showed that representative variants differed in activity under identical assay conditions. Collectively, our findings suggest that host lifestyle and diet contribute to population-associated sequence variation in genes encoding enzymes involved in degrading polysaccharides.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Zhang J, Ren Y, Jia Y, et al (2026)

Effects of tangerine peel flavonoids on flavor compounds and microbial communities in cigar tobacco fermentation: insights from ion migration chromatography and microbiomics.

Frontiers in microbiology, 17:1793725.

INTRODUCTION: It is reported that addition of tangerine peel extract (flavonoids) can significantly improve the quality and flavor of tobacco leaves during fermentation. Nobiletin, tangeretin and hesperidin are the predominant flavonoids present in tangerine peel. However, their effects on the fermentation process of cigar tobacco leaves (CTL) have not yet been elucidated.

METHODS: Three major tangerine peel flavonoids, hesperidin (CPG), nobiletin (CCPS) and tangeretin (JPS), were applied during the fermentation of CTL) to evaluate their effects on fermentation outcomes. Gas chromatography-ion mobility spectrometry (GC-IMS) and microbiome analysis based on 16S rRNA and internal transcribed spacer sequencing were employed to characterize volatile flavor compounds and microbial community dynamics during the 30 days of fermentation.

RESULTS: A total of 157 volatile compounds were identified in CTL in this study. All tangerine peel flavonoid treatments improved the flavor quality of tobacco leaves by modulating the microbial community. The CPG group was enriched in esters and acids (e.g., n-amyl formate and propyl acetate), contributing to fruity aroma, with high relative abundances of Firmicutes and Staphylococcus, and a slight increase in Bacillus. The CCPS group accumulated abundant ketones (e.g., 3-methyl-2-cyclopenten-1-one, 3-pentanone, and 2-hydroxy-2-methyl-4-pentanone), providing caramel-like sweetness and enhancing the smoke body, while the enrichment of Sphingomonas, Rhizobium and other genera elevated bacterial diversity. The JPS group formed characteristic volatile compounds showed the highest fungal richness among all treatments. The mixed flavonoid (HHHT) group exhibited the highest abundance of Firmicutes and Staphylococcus, the lowest proportion of Proteobacteria, nearly undetectable harmful microorganisms, and the lowest microbial diversity. All treatment groups shared certain microbial trends, but distinct microbial profiles were observed among the CPG, CCPS, JPS, and HHHT groups, with significant correlations between key microorganisms and volatile flavor compounds.

DISCUSSION: In this study, the influence of tangerine peel flavonoids on CTL flavor quality and microbial community was systematically analyzed. These findings demonstrated that tangerine peel flavonoids enhanced flavor of CTL by modulating microbial communities during fermentation, and this provides new insights into CTL processing.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

McIntyre DB, Barton PS, Preston S, et al (2026)

Microbial succession in decomposing carrion is driven by time, modulated by insects and microbial perturbation.

Frontiers in microbiology, 17:1773208.

Recent research into decomposition has shed light on the intricate interplay within multi-kingdom communities, with microbial populations emerging as key players in the breakdown process and emphasizing their interactions within the broader decomposer ecosystem. Despite this, the specific roles and regulatory mechanisms of microbial communities remain underexplored. Gaining deeper insight into these dynamics is essential for advancing ecological and forensic sciences. This study examines the role of microbes in decomposition, particularly in relation to insect activity and external microbiome alterations. We used 12 piglet (Sus scrofa) cadavers placed in a rural area in southern Australia, to investigate how experimental insect exclusion and microbial perturbation affects decomposition. Bacterial microbial composition was quantified using 16S technology and compared among treatments and time points. Results showed significant shifts in bacterial diversity and abundance across time points sampled, with early-stage decomposition characterized by a higher abundance of Firmicutes and Actinobacteria, followed by a dominance of Proteobacteria in later stages. Principal coordinate analysis confirmed these patterns, showing that while decomposition stage is the primary driver of diversity, insect access and microbial perturbation shape microbial stability and community shifts rather than overall diversity. This challenges assumptions that external factors strongly influence diversity and highlights the need to consider both time and microbial dynamics in forensic applications, particularly for post-mortem interval estimation.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Muhammad N (2026)

Nanobiotic-Enhanced Probiotics for Targeted Gut Delivery: Mechanisms, Therapeutic Applications, and Translational Challenges.

International journal of nanomedicine, 21:607382.

The gut microbiota plays a pivotal role in maintaining human health by influencing physiological processes such as digestion, immune regulation, and metabolism. However, disruptions in gut microbial balance, or dysbiosis, are associated with numerous disorders. Probiotics have emerged as potential therapeutic agents, but their efficacy is limited by challenges such as low survival during gastrointestinal transit, poor colonization, and lack of targeted delivery. Nanotechnology has recently provided promising solutions to these limitations by enhancing the stability, viability, and functionality of probiotics. To provide an updated perspective, this article presents a structured narrative review informed by a PRISMA-guided literature search and screening process. Relevant studies published between 2021 and 2025 were identified from PubMed, Scopus, IEEE Xplore, and Google Scholar and were narratively synthesized to examine nanoencapsulation strategies, hybrid nanobiotic systems, smart delivery platforms, therapeutic applications, and translational barriers. Nanoencapsulation techniques, hybrid nanobiotic systems, and smart delivery platforms are at the forefront of probiotic enhancement. These systems improve protection of probiotics against harsh gastric conditions and enable targeted release within specific regions of the gastrointestinal tract, thereby enhancing colonization efficiency and therapeutic potential. Moreover, nanobiotics show promise in modulating gut microbiota composition, strengthening immune responses, and opening new therapeutic avenues for the management of gastrointestinal disorders, metabolic diseases, and immune-related conditions. Despite these advances, challenges related to safety, scalability, and regulatory approval remain significant barriers to clinical translation. This review synthesizes recent progress in nanobiotic-enhanced probiotics, evaluates their therapeutic applications, and discusses key challenges and future directions for precision microbiome therapeutics.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Math RK, Javaregowda PK, SG Patil (2026)

Effect of Yoga and Meditation on Human Gut Microbiota: A Systematic Review.

International journal of yoga, 19(1):41-53.

The evidence from the clinical studies on the influence of yoga and meditation on gut microbiota in humans has been summarized in this systematic review. Searches were conducted until November 2023 in four electronic databases: SCOPUS, PubMed, Google Scholar, and Cochrane Controlled Registry of Trials (CENTRAL) to find relevant studies published in English. Studies on the influence of yoga and meditation on gut microbiome in human participants of any age or gender were included in the systematic review. The outcomes were modulations in the composition and function of gut microbiota and their metabolite levels. Due to the varied approaches used in the study designs and outcome measures of the included studies, a narrative synthesis was carried out. The database search resulted in 247 titles and abstracts, out of which four articles were included for qualitative synthesis. There was one nonrandomized controlled study and three observational studies. The studies were conducted on a healthy population (n = 440). The participants were followers of a vegan or vegetarian diet. The control group subjects were nonmeditators, i.e., who never received any meditation training. All the reviewed studies have shown a favorable change in the composition and function of gut microbiota and their metabolites with meditation practice when compared to controls. Yoga and meditation improved the composition and function of gut microbiota. However, all the subjects were following a vegetarian/vegan diet, so the beneficial changes demonstrated in the gut microbiota may be attributed to the combined effects of meditation and a vegetarian/vegan diet.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Wu CK, Cheng IS, Chung YC, et al (2026)

The Effects of a Prebiotic Formula Promoting Akkermansia muciniphila (AKK) on Gut Health: A Single-Centre, Randomised Controlled Trial.

International journal of medical sciences, 23(6):1952-1965.

BACKGROUND: Gut health is closely associated with metabolic homeostasis, and alterations in gut microbiota composition have been linked to inflammation and metabolic disorders. Prebiotics targeting specific taxa, such as Akkermansia muciniphila, have attracted interest for their potential to modulate gut microbiota composition. While preclinical studies have suggested a role for A. muciniphila in gut-related metabolic pathways, clinical evidence supporting its effects on microbiome regulation and metabolic outcomes remains limited. Therefore, this study aimed to explore the effects of a prebiotic blend designed to promote A. muciniphila on gut microbiota composition and selected physiological parameters.

METHODS: Seventy participants were randomized to receive either placebo or the AKK formula for 8 weeks. Anthropometric assessments, blood tests, and stool examinations were performed at baseline and at weeks 4 and 8. The main analyses were conducted in the per-protocol population (n = 25 per group).

RESULTS: The results revealed no significant markers of liver or kidney dysfunction in either group. The AKK formula group showed an increased qPCR-derived relative abundance of A. muciniphila compared with total bacteria. Gut microbiome analysis further demonstrated selective changes in gut microbiota composition in the AKK formula group, including an increased relative abundance of Bifidobacterium and decreased relative abundances of Proteobacteria, Erysipelotrichia, and Escherichia-Shigella. A trend toward lower gastrointestinal discomfort scores was observed in the AKK formula group during the intervention period.

CONCLUSIONS: The AKK formula increased the relative abundance of A. muciniphila, was associated with selective modulation of gut microbiota composition, and showed a trend toward reduced gastrointestinal discomfort, supporting its potential relevance in future gut health research.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Lin LT, Li CJ, Lin PH, et al (2026)

Targeted Vaginal Microbiome Modulation by Postbiotic Intervention Reduces Dysbiosis-Associated Pathogens in Infertile Women: A Pilot Study.

International journal of medical sciences, 23(6):1921-1932.

BACKGROUND: Vaginal dysbiosis characterized by depleted Lactobacillus populations is associated with impaired fertility outcomes in women undergoing assisted reproduction. Postbiotic interventions delivering antimicrobial peptides without live bacteria may offer targeted microecological modulation while preserving community stability. We investigated the microbial and clinical effects of an eight-week antimicrobial peptide-based postbiotic in infertile women.

METHODS: Fifteen infertile women (mean age 38.7 ± 4.1 years) with ≥ 2 prior in vitro fertilization failures received intravaginal postbiotic therapy (VAGINNE[®], Good-Care Biotech, Ltd.) for 8.0 ± 0.3 weeks before frozen embryo transfer (FET). Paired vaginal samples collected pre- and post-treatment underwent full-length 16S rRNA gene sequencing using PacBio Sequel platform. Microbiome composition, beta-diversity, differential abundance, and absolute bacterial load were analyzed.

RESULTS: The cohort achieved a clinical pregnancy rate of 46.7% (7/15) following postbiotic intervention and subsequent FET. Beta-diversity analysis revealed preservation of global community structure (PERMANOVA R² = 0.05, p = 0.65), indicating ecological stability. Despite cohort-level stability, patient-specific analysis identified favorable microbiome restructuring in 73% of participants (11/15), including emergence of Lactobacillus-dominant communities in previously dysbiotic profiles. Absolute abundance quantification demonstrated selective elimination of dysbiosis-associated pathogens: Prevotella decreased from 408.47±990.78 to 0.29±0.83 cells/sample (p < 0.01), Pseudomonas from 419.07±567.04 to 89.14±114.42 (p < 0.05), and complete clearance of Howardella (3.53±9.87 to undetectable). Conversely, Gluconacetobacter increased significantly from undetectable to 2.93±4.18 cells/sample (p < 0.05).

CONCLUSIONS: In this pilot cohort, antimicrobial peptide-based postbiotic therapy was associated with encouraging pregnancy outcomes and targeted pathogen clearance. The intervention selectively reduced high-burden detrimental taxa while maintaining microbiome architectural integrity, supporting precision microecological modulation as a promising adjuvant strategy for reproductive health.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Zhao ZK, Ma JL, Lu F, et al (2026)

Exosomes in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Mechanisms, Diagnostic Potential, and Engineering Strategies for Precision Therapy.

International journal of medical sciences, 23(6):2141-2153.

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic gastrointestinal disorder characterized by immune dysregulation, epithelial barrier dysfunction, and microbial imbalance. Despite progress in biologic therapies, challenges such as variable efficacy, systemic side effects, and the lack of reliable biomarkers remain significant obstacles in clinical management. Exosomes, key mediators of intercellular communication, play a pivotal role in IBD's pathogenesis by transporting bioactive substances. Increasing evidence links exosomes to critical IBD processes, including Th17/Treg imbalance, inflammasome activation, and host-microbiome interactions. Exosomes also show potential as minimally invasive biomarkers for disease activity and subtype differentiation. Furthermore, advancements in exosome engineering, including surface modification and hybrid nanostructure development, enhance their potential for targeted drug delivery and immune modulation in IBD. This review summarizes the role of exosomes in IBD, their diagnostic potential, and emerging exosome-based therapeutic strategies.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Baumann PC, Pospich R, Döhner K, et al (2026)

Keratinocyte Priming by Staphylococcus aureus Reduces HSV-1 Susceptibility.

Allergy [Epub ahead of print].

BACKGROUND: Individuals with atopic dermatitis (AD) are at increased risk for skin infections, including eczema herpeticum (EH), a severe condition caused by herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1). While AD skin is often colonized by Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus), its role in EH susceptibility remains unclear. Here we aim to investigate differences in the skin microbiome of AD patients with (ADEH[+]) and without (ADEH[-]) EH and examine the impact of S. aureus and S. epidermidis on HSV-1 infection in an in vitro keratinocyte model.

METHODS: 16S microbiome sequencing was performed on skin samples from ADEH[+], ADEH[-], and healthy controls. To investigate microbial effects on HSV-1 infection, keratinocytes were pre-incubated with heat-killed S. aureus (HKSA) or S. epidermidis (HKSE), followed by HSV-1 infection in the presence or absence of the Th2 cytokines IL-4 and IL-13, simulating the conditions of AD lesional skin. Infection rates and transcriptomic changes were analyzed.

RESULTS: ADEH[+] patients showed a reduced microbial diversity compared to ADEH[-], with increased S. aureus and S. epidermidis colonization. HKSA, but not HKSE, protected keratinocytes from HSV-1 infection and reduced the release of infectious progeny virus. Transcriptome analysis of keratinocytes revealed HKSA-induced upregulation of interferon pathways and antimicrobial peptides, and downregulation of HSV-1 entry factors.

CONCLUSION: Pre-incubation with S. aureus set basal keratinocytes into an alarmed state, restricting HSV-1 infection presumably via downregulation of receptors important for viral entry and activation of antiviral pathways.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Junaid M, Zeming H, Y Zhu (2026)

The Leptin Renaissance: Orchestrating the Next Endocrine Paradigm.

Journal of cellular biochemistry, 127(5):e70091.

Leptin, a hormone historically recognized for regulating appetite and energy homeostasis, is increasingly appreciated as a central mediator of immune function, metabolic integration, and tissue-specific signaling. Despite decades of research, leptin resistance limits the efficacy of conventional therapies, such as hormone replacement, in treating obesity and related disorders. Emerging evidence demonstrates that leptin interacts bidirectionally with the gut microbiome, influencing systemic metabolism and immune responses. Advances in multi-omics profiling, synthetic biology, and tissue-targeted therapeutics provide unprecedented opportunities to overcome these barriers. Here, we present a perspective emphasizing integrative strategies that combine precision medicine, immune modulation, engineered leptin analogs, and microbiome-targeted interventions. Leveraging these innovations could redefine leptin-based therapies, enabling system-level restoration of metabolic and immune homeostasis. Understanding leptin as a pleiotropic, multi-system hormone positions it at the forefront of the next endocrine paradigm.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Sakai M, Mori I, Kawasaki A, et al (2026)

Kytococcal and Staphylococcal strains isolated from Japanese subjects with foot malodor and their control.

Journal of applied microbiology pii:8688098 [Epub ahead of print].

AIMS: Human foot malodor has been reported to be derived from volatile fatty acids, mainly isovaleric acid, generated by foot bacteria, especially staphylococcal species. However, the knowledge of foot odor is limited compared with axillary odor. Therefore, this study was conducted to identify the causative bacteria of foot malodor in Japanese individuals and to explore methods for controlling foot odor.

METHODS AND RESULTS: 16S rRNA gene-targeted microbiome analysis and qPCR analysis were performed on samples from the plantar surface and toe clefts. 16S rRNA gene sequencing was used to identify isolates. Commercially available botanical extracts were screened for their ability to inhibit microbial production of malodorous compounds, specifically the conversion of L-leucine to isovaleric acid. Microbiome analysis and qPCR indicated that Kytococcus is associated with the intensity of isovaleric acid-like odor. 16S rRNA gene analysis of isolates identified Kytococcus schroeteri and Staphylococcus hominis as isovaleric acid-producing strains. Screening of botanical extracts revealed that Sanguisorba officinalis and Eucalyptus globulus extracts effectively inhibited the generation of isovaleric acid from L-leucine.

CONCLUSIONS: Kytococcus, particularly K. schroeteri and S. hominis are implicated in isovaleric acid-mediated foot malodor in Japanese subjects. Extracts of Sanguisorba officinalis and Eucalyptus globulus show potential as control agents by inhibiting microbial production of isovaleric acid.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Shao H, Yoo H, Cai J-N, et al (2026)

H2O2-producing commensal streptococci disrupt Streptococcus mutans-Candida albicans synergism.

Applied and environmental microbiology [Epub ahead of print].

Microbial homeostasis is maintained by the antagonistic capacity of commensal bacteria against cariogenic pathogens. In the oral cavity, commensal Streptococcus, dominant colonizers of the tooth surface, can produce hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), modulating virulent cross-kingdom biofilm formation. To investigate their ecological role, clinical isolates from dental plaque were compared with reference strains, including Streptococcus oralis ATCC 35037 and S. oralis subsp. tigurinus J22 to determine their H2O2-producing capabilities. The antagonistic potential of S. oralis against Streptococcus mutans and Candida albicans was evaluated using microbial and biochemical assessments. In a saliva-coated hydroxyapatite disc model, S. oralis strains were co-cultured with S. mutans and C. albicans. A high H2O2-producing S. oralis J22 inhibited EPS formation in S. mutans and yeast-to-hypha transition in C. albicans, thereby reducing EPS-mediated bacterial-fungal cell colocalization. Time-lapse confocal imaging revealed that S. oralis J22 dominated the biofilm through H2O2-mediated antagonistic interactions. In contrast, the inhibitory effect of S. oralis strains lacking the spxB gene on cross-kingdom biofilms was significantly reduced. These data provide ecological insights into how physicochemical properties of early colonizing commensals shape the structure and virulence of cross-kingdom oral biofilm through antimicrobial-mediated antagonistic activity.IMPORTANCEThe co-existence of S. mutans and C. albicans accelerates the development of severe early childhood caries, particularly under frequent sucrose exposure. This study demonstrates that early colonizing and antimicrobial-producing oral commensal bacteria can disrupt these pathogenic interactions by modulating their physicochemical associations. These findings highlight the potential of enhancing commensal bacteria as part of novel caries prevention strategies. Further characterization of the functional oral microbiota, especially clinically relevant oral commensals, could advance the development of diagnostic biomarkers and microbiome-targeted therapeutics to prevent painful and costly oral diseases.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Wang X-R (2026)

mSphere of Influence: How a gut microbiota study reshaped my thinking on tick-borne pathogens.

mSphere [Epub ahead of print].

Xin-Ru Wang works in tick biology and intracellular bacterial pathogenesis. In this mSphere of Influence article, she reflects on how "Gut microbiota of the tick vector Ixodes scapularis modulate colonization of the Lyme disease spirochete" by Narasimhan et al. (2014) reshaped her understanding of vector competence by placing pathogen colonization within the ecological context of the tick microbiome. Her laboratory studies Rickettsia-tick cell interactions, including autophagy, apoptosis, and innate immune signaling. Here, she examines how this ecological framework extends to the intracellular level, where pathogenic Rickettsia may encounter cellular environments already shaped by resident endosymbionts.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Rodriguez TN, Smeyne RJ, M Smeyne (2026)

Neurobiology of exercise in Parkinson's disease.

Journal of Parkinson's disease [Epub ahead of print].

Epidemiological, preclinical, and clinical studies increasingly support exercise as a potent neuroprotective and disease-modifying intervention in Parkinson's disease (PD). Preclinical studies, including toxin- and α-synuclein-based models, using voluntary, forced, and skilled exercise paradigms demonstrate preservation of nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons, improved motor function, and activation of convergent pathways. Protective processes include upregulation of neurotrophic factors (BDNF, GDNF, VEGF and Irisin), enhanced mitochondrial biogenesis and oxidative resilience, reduced neuroinflammation, improved basal ganglia synaptic plasticity and increased lysosomal functions. Additional emerging mechanisms underlying exercise-induced neuroprotection involve vascular remodeling, pathways regulating cellular oxygen and hypoxia, modulation of the gut microbiome, and epigenetic reprogramming. Importantly, clinical studies mirror these preclinical findings, demonstrating improvements in motor symptoms, balance, fitness, and quality of life, along with functionally positive changes in exercise-responsive biomarkers such as BDNF, irisin, and glutathione. Collectively, these highlight exercise as a robust, multifaceted therapeutic strategy with significant implications for PD prevention and management. This review synthesizes findings from the past 5 years across preclinical models and patient studies to define how exercise reduces PD risk, slows symptom progression, and engages biological pathways relevant to neuroprotection and restoration.Lay abstractExercise, as a consistent lifestyle habit, is beneficial to overall health with cardiovascular and cognitive benefits; and also supports a better quality of life throughout aging. Exercise has been demonstrated to reduce the risk of developing Parkinsons's Disease as well as to delay the symptoms of PD. In this review we will report recent (2020-2025) preclinical and clinical studies that examine the mechanisms underlying exercise's neuroprotective benefit related to PD.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Yang Y, Lian S, Li X, et al (2026)

Unveiling metagenomic and metabolomic signatures in mild and severe pneumonia caused by Mycoplasma pneumoniae in children.

Microbial genomics, 12(5):.

Background. Mycoplasma pneumoniae (MP) is a common causative pathogen of community-acquired pneumonia in children, with clinical presentations ranging in severity. Early stratification and timely intervention are essential for improving patient outcomes. However, a major clinical challenge lies in the limited ability to accurately distinguish between mild and severe cases based solely on early clinical indicators.Methods. This prospective real-world study investigated the differences in microbiome and metabolomics between mild and severe MP pneumonia (MPP) in children. Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid samples were collected from 153 children and subjected to metagenomic sequencing and non-targeted metabolomic analysis. Meanwhile, to enhance early diagnostic accuracy, this study developed a machine learning classification model and validated it using a third-party validation set.Results. The results revealed significant alterations in the abundance of specific bacterial communities in the severe group, most notably the coexistence of MP and Alphainfluenzavirus influenzae, which may contribute to disease exacerbation through synergistic pathogenic mechanisms. Furthermore, the macrolide resistant rate of MP in the severe group exceeded 80%, emphasizing the importance of appropriate antibiotic selection. Metabolomic analysis showed a significant enrichment of metabolites related to cellular energy metabolism and immune regulation in severe cases. The model demonstrated exceptional predictive performance, achieving an area under the curve ranging from 0.909 to 0.991, which significantly outperformed conventional clinical stratification methods.Conclusions. These findings elucidate the distinct pathophysiological mechanisms underlying both mild and severe MP infections and provide a promising framework for improving early diagnosis and personalized treatment strategies in paediatric MPP.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Fulaneti FS, Brasil-Neto ES, Rumpel VS, et al (2026)

Microbial co-inoculation and extracellular vesicles: new frontiers for soybean productivity.

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, 119(6):.

Over the past decades, the intensive use of chemical fertilizers in agriculture has shown low efficiency while causing serious environmental issues and leading to soil nutrient imbalances. These challenges are compounded by climate change, increasing incidence of diseases and pests, and soil acidification, factors that jeopardize agricultural productivity and, consequently, threaten global food security. Soybean (Glycine max L.) is one of the world's most important crops, serving as a key source of protein and oil for both human consumption and animal feed. Its global relevance continues to grow with rising demand for food, biofuels, and industrial applications, with Brazil, the United States, and Argentina leading production. Beyond its economic value, soybean contributes to agricultural sustainability through symbiotic nitrogen fixation, reducing the need for synthetic fertilizers. However, maintaining high yields under changing environmental conditions requires innovative management strategies. In this context, one promising strategy to mitigate these problems is the use of plant growth-promoting bacteria (PGPB), which contribute to more sustainable crop yield. Although numerous studies are underway regarding the potential of PGPB, further research is still necessary due to the limited understanding of their mechanisms of action and the vast range of benefits they may offer. Currently, there is a wide variety of inoculants based on different bacterial species, which play a key role in stimulating plant growth and reducing reliance on agrochemicals. Among emerging technologies, noteworthy examples include molecular inoculants (still not widely adopted commercially), bacterial and fungal consortia formulated into a single product, and inoculants containing genetically edited microorganisms-all of which have shown great promise in enhancing the performance of beneficial microbial species. The selection and genetic editing of rhizosphere-associated PGPB-an essential component of the plant microbiome-are viable alternatives for promoting more sustainable agriculture. Thus, this review examines the main inoculant technologies aimed at obtaining efficient microorganisms capable of improving rhizosphere conditions and microbial community dynamics, representing a strategic opportunity for developing solutions that enhance soybean sustainability.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

McKay S, XM Li (2026)

Understanding Infantile Atopic Dermatitis: A Review of Environmental, Familial, Genetic and Microbial Influences.

Current allergy and asthma reports, 26(1):.

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This review aims to clarify the early-life risk and protective factors associated with Infantile Atopic Dermatitis (IAD)-an inflammatory skin condition that typically develops between birth and two years of age. The goal was to examine recent findings on maternal, environmental, and microbial influences on IAD.

RECENT FINDINGS: Prenatal and postpartum maternal probiotic use may reduce IAD risk, though no significant alterations in infants' gut microbiota were found. Infants with IAD exhibit higher Clostridia levels, while Verrucomicrobia are more abundant in non-IAD cases. Breastmilk from the mother of affected infants contains higher arachidonic acid and lower eicosapentaenoic acid, whereas formula-feeding may lower IAD risk. Seasonal influences such as reduced sunlight or humidity are associated with higher susceptibility. Elevated skin biomarkers, including TARC/CCL17 and IL-8, have been observed in infants who later develop IAD. Early antibiotic exposure, particularly during the first trimester, also increases risk.  IAD is multifactorial, involving genetics, environment, and skin barrier dysfunction. Understanding the interplay between the microbiome, maternal influences, and environmental exposures may guide future preventive approaches. Further research into non-pharmacologic and microbiome-targeted interventions is warranted to delay or prevent IAD onset.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Ruiz-Torres NG, Martínez-Sánchez S, de León-Lorenzana A, et al (2026)

Drivers of Microbiome Composition Among Helminth Parasites Sharing the Same Insectivorous Bat Host.

Molecular ecology, 35(10):e70389.

Parasitic metazoans are increasingly recognised to form close associations with microbial taxa. Under the holobiont concept, these associations are an eco-evolutionary unit under joint selection. However, for most parasitic helminth species and particularly those associated with wildlife, these interactions and their effect on parasite evolution remain unknown. Investigating the factors determining the composition of helminth microbiomes is the first step towards a better understanding of helminth holobionts. Using the insectivorous bat Peropteryx kappleri and its parasitic helminths as a model system, we characterised the microbiome of 41 helminth individuals of four trematode and one nematode species in various bat intestinal and biliary microhabitats, along with bat tissues and luminal fluids. Our results based on 16S rRNA metabarcoding revealed that the microbiome composition of the different helminth species is partly influenced by their microhabitat (bat tissue), but ultimately each helminth species exhibits a distinctive microbial signature. Microbiome composition among the four trematode species showed no phylogenetic signal (no correlation with genetic similarity). Compared to the bat host, each helminth species exhibited enriched microbial taxa with putative symbiotic potential, some of which are commonly found in arthropods (potential intermediate hosts of helminths) and may be conserved throughout the parasite's life cycle. We propose that helminth microbiomes are determined by ecologically relevant factors and provide a basis for future functional research with implications for parasite establishment, development, and transmission.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Yan G, Wang S, Li D, et al (2026)

Effects of dietary royal jelly supplementation on development, fecundity, and gut microbial community in Sarcophaga peregrina (Diptera: Sarcophagidae).

Journal of economic entomology pii:8688239 [Epub ahead of print].

Intensive laboratory rearing often reduces key phenotypic traits in farmed insects. We tested royal jelly (RJ) as a nutritional intervention in Sarcophaga peregrina (Robineau-Desvoidy) (Diptera: Sarcophagidae), assessing life-history traits and gut microbiota. Larvae were supplemented with RJ at 0%, 1%, 5%, or 10% (w/w, of the total bovine liver paste diet); a subset of emerging adults continued to receive the same RJ dose, creating "larval-only" and "larval + adult" dietary regimens. Although RJ did not alter mean larval weight at dispersal, it significantly accelerated larval growth and increased pupation rate. Adult lifespan was extended by larval supplementation and further prolonged when RJ was provided to both larvae and adults. Fecundity followed the same pattern: the "larval + adult" regimen exceeded the corresponding "larval-only" dose across concentrations. Dose-response relationships were non-linear, with modest gains at 1% and a plateau between 5% and 10%, indicating a mid-range optimum. 16S rRNA gene sequencing showed that RJ reduced gut α-diversity and shifted community composition; control-enriched taxa were suppressed under RJ. Functional predictions indicated that RJ-treated larvae harbored a gut microbiota with reduced metabolic potential, suggesting less microbial nutrient use and a lower immune challenge to the host. Together, results suggest that RJ is a promising tool to improve mass-rearing efficiency. Under our experimental conditions, a 5% RJ diet applied at both larval and adult stages appears to be an effective starting formulation, with the observed gains likely reflecting both direct nutritional benefits and microbiome restructuring.

RevDate: 2026-05-20
CmpDate: 2026-05-20

Cabirol A, Quinn A, Schafer J, et al (2026)

A defined community of core gut microbiota members promotes cognitive performance in honey bees.

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 123(21):e2608600123.

Gut microbiota across animals have been shown to influence host cognition and behavior. However, it remains unclear whether these cognitive effects are driven by specific bacterial species or arise from community-level interactions. Here, we leveraged the honey bee (Apis mellifera) as a model system, which harbors a simple and well-characterized gut microbiota that is experimentally tractable and has been previously shown to impact host cognition. We established a defined bacterial community-composed of core members of the honey bee gut microbiota. Gnotobiotic bee experiments with the full community, communities missing individual members, or individual members showed that only the full community enhanced honey bees' performances in odor discrimination learning and short-term memory compared to microbiota-deprived bees. Metabolomic analyses identified several metabolites associated with learning success that mapped to pathways modulated by microbial colonization, including tryptophan metabolism, nucleoside metabolism, and lysine degradation. However, many of these metabolites were not altered by removing individual members from the full microbial community. This suggests that microbiota-mediated improvements in cognition are emergent properties of the community as a whole, rather than the result of individual metabolites or specific bacterial taxa acting alone. Our findings support a systems-level view of the microbiome, suggesting that understanding and manipulating host development, particularly in relation to brain function, should prioritize microbial community function (e.g., metabolic pathways) over taxonomic composition alone.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Liu S, Costa FS, DR Valenzano (2026)

Immune surveillance and microbial escape in the aging host: Why does the microbiome lose its balance?.

PLoS biology, 24(5):e3003815 pii:PBIOLOGY-D-26-00812 [Epub ahead of print].

Host-associated microbiomes are compositionally stable across most of the life span, yet undergo consistent and marked deterioration during aging, a phenomenon linked to metabolic dysfunction and disease. What drives this late-life collapse remains poorly understood, in part because the mechanisms by which hosts actively construct and maintain the microbial niche during adulthood remain incompletely characterized. This Unsolved Mystery integrates evidence from immunology and ecosystem ecology to investigate the role of immunosenescence in age-associated dysbiosis, raising the possibility of interventions that restore immune surveillance capacity alongside ecologically informed microbiome management, rather than targeting community composition in isolation.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Catley CS, Hoedt EC, Pockney P, et al (2026)

Unravelling Anastomotic Leak: Biological Mechanisms Underlying Intestinal Healing After Resection.

American journal of physiology. Gastrointestinal and liver physiology [Epub ahead of print].

Understanding intestinal healing following resection and anastomosis is a challenging topic due to the complexity of underlying mechanisms. Anastomotic healing follows the fundamental phases of normal wound repair; however, the intestinal anastomosis represents a unique biological environment in which factors such as the structure of the intestines as well as the microbiome, may modify the healing process. Disruptions in any of the healing phases such as the inflammatory, proliferative and remodelling phase may result in severe complications, characterised by the intraluminal contents leaking out into the extraluminal space, termed an anastomotic leak (AL). Despite decades of surgical advancements, we are still no closer in understanding the underlying AL aetiology. It is clear that ALs are multifactorial in nature and contributed to by patient, technical and biological-related factors, however, emerging evidence suggests that biological mechanisms may play a more significant role in AL pathology than originally believed. Evidence points to an interplay between epithelial healing, tissue oxygenation and the resident microbiome in influencing mucosal healing at the anastomotic site. However, the precise contribution of these factors in failed anastomotic healing and AL aetiology remains unclear. In this review, we examine the phases of healing, discuss the existing literature on biological factors affecting anastomotic healing and the advancements made to improve AL rates by targeting the healing response.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Schoenmakers S, Nieuwenhuijse DF, Reiss I, et al (2026)

No detection of relevant virus-specific DNA or RNA sequences in the placenta.

Placenta, 181:168-174 pii:S0143-4004(26)00172-4 [Epub ahead of print].

INTRODUCTION: The existence of a placental bacterial microbiome remains a subject of active debate, with recent studies challenging earlier claims of a resident microbial community. While the role of bacterial and viral pathogens in placental infection and adverse pregnancy outcomes is well established, the potential existence of a resident placental (non-pathogenic) virome remains largely unexplored. Given the placenta's vital role in fetal development, our study aimed to investigate whether viral genetic material is present in placental tissue, rather than to identify viral pathogens, in both uncomplicated and complicated pregnancies using viral metagenomic capture sequencing.

METHODS: Placental biopsies were obtained from three pregnancy groups: (1) delivered by elective caesarean section (n = 6), (2) delivered by emergency caesarean section (n = 6), and (3) complicated by preeclampsia (n = 5). Samples were processed using VirCapSeq VERT, a targeted enrichment strategy for vertebrate viruses, followed by Illumina NovaSeq 6000 sequencing.

RESULTS: High quality sequencing yielded an average of 46.6 million reads per sample, with >99.6% of reads aligned to the human genome, and <0.4% of non human sequences. Across all samples, only 12 viral contigs were identified, corresponding to bacteriophages, human endogenous retroviruses, and human gammaherpesvirus 4 (not confirmed by PCR), mostly with low read counts.

CONCLUSIONS: Our study found no evidence supporting the presence of a resident placental virome. Together with existing data on the absence of a bacterial microbiome, these findings support the concept that the placenta does not harbor a detectable microbial or viral community under controlled sampling conditions.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Ni M, Junker K, Liu Y, et al (2026)

Epigenetic phase variation in the gut microbiome enhances bacterial adaptation.

Cell host & microbe pii:S1931-3128(26)00175-7 [Epub ahead of print].

The human microbiome continuously adapts to variations in diet and host physiology. Epigenetic phase variation (ePV) mediated by bacterial DNA methylation can generate phenotypic heterogeneity within clonal populations. ePVs have been characterized in human pathogens, but their roles in commensals remain unclear. Here, we cataloged ePVs in infant and adult gut microbiomes, revealing genome-wide and site-specific ePV in response to antibiotics and fecal microbiota transplantation. Long-read metagenomics revealed genome-wide ePV mediated by structural variations of DNA methyltransferases. Analysis of public short-read metagenomic datasets further revealed a high prevalence of genome-wide ePVs in the human microbiome. Site-specific ePVs were identified and associated with antibiotics or probiotic engraftment. Focusing on an Akkermansia muciniphila isolate, we find a specific ePV regulating mucC, a gene of unknown function but whose heterologous expression enhances bacterial tolerance to antibiotics via a bet-hedging strategy. Thus, epigenetic modifications are used by gut bacteria to adapt to fluctuating environments.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Hattori-Muroi K, Maruta H, Takahashi D, et al (2026)

Dietary soy shapes the microbiome to induce commensal-specific T follicular helper cells and IgA production.

Immunity pii:S1074-7613(26)00175-5 [Epub ahead of print].

The commensal microbiota plays a crucial role in shaping mucosal immunity, particularly in the induction of T follicular helper (Tfh) cells and subsequent B cell IgA production. Here, we demonstrate that dietary soy elicits a robust Tfh cell and IgA response in Peyer's patches of weaning mice. Soy feeding promotes the expansion of two principal commensal bacterial species, Limosilactobacillus reuteri and Muribaculum intestinale. Mechanistically, L. reuteri provides cognate antigens for Tfh cell activation, while M. intestinale functions as an adjuvant by promoting IL-1β production from myeloid cells. The resulting IgA exhibits polyreactivity and enhances protection against Salmonella infection. These findings highlight the specific interplay among dietary components, intestinal microbiota, and mucosal immunity, thereby establishing a diet-microbe-immune axis that shapes host defense in early life. This axis represents a promising therapeutic target for developing future strategies to enhance resistance to enteric pathogens.

RevDate: 2026-05-20

Ding X, Murayama R, Cai Y, et al (2026)

Xanomeline-trospium reverses phencyclidine-induced cognitive deficits through modulation of the gut microbiota-brain axis in mice.

Translational psychiatry pii:10.1038/s41398-026-04097-0 [Epub ahead of print].

Cognitive impairment in schizophrenia remains largely unaddressed by dopamine-based antipsychotics. Xanomeline-trospium (KarXT; Cobenfy[®]), a combination of the muscarinic M1/M4 receptor agonist xanomeline and the peripherally restricted antagonist trospium, effectively reduces psychosis but is associated with gastrointestinal adverse effects. Here, we tested whether KarXT reverses phencyclidine (PCP)-induced cognitive deficits through microbiota-associated mechanisms in adult male mice. Mice received saline or PCP (10 mg/kg/day, s.c.) on days 1-5 and 8-12, followed by vehicle or KarXT [xanomeline 2 mg/kg/day + trospium 1 mg/kg/day, intragastric] on days 15-28. Recognition memory was evaluated using the novel object recognition test (NORT), and lung and intestinal microbiota (small intestine, cecum, and colon) were profiled by 16S rRNA sequencing. KarXT significantly rescued PCP-induced recognition-memory deficits without exacerbating PCP-related reductions in weight gain or fecal output. Microbiome analyses revealed region-specific dysbiosis after PCP exposure, most pronounced in the small intestine and cecum. Several taxa elevated by PCP-including Bacteroides fragilis, Veillonella ratti, Megamonas funiformis, Cupriavidus numazuensis, and Acetanaerobacterium elongatum-were normalized following KarXT treatment. Notably, restoration of multiple pulmonary, cecal, and colonic taxa correlated positively with the NORT recognition index. These findings demonstrate that KarXT reverses PCP-induced cognitive dysfunction while modulating microbial composition in a region-specific manner. Elucidating these relationships may help optimize cognitive efficacy and reduce gastrointestinal adverse effects of muscarinic therapies for schizophrenia.

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RJR Experience and Expertise

Researcher

Robbins holds BS, MS, and PhD degrees in the life sciences. He served as a tenured faculty member in the Zoology and Biological Science departments at Michigan State University. He is currently exploring the intersection between genomics, microbial ecology, and biodiversity — an area that promises to transform our understanding of the biosphere.

Educator

Robbins has extensive experience in college-level education: At MSU he taught introductory biology, genetics, and population genetics. At JHU, he was an instructor for a special course on biological database design. At FHCRC, he team-taught a graduate-level course on the history of genetics. At Bellevue College he taught medical informatics.

Administrator

Robbins has been involved in science administration at both the federal and the institutional levels. At NSF he was a program officer for database activities in the life sciences, at DOE he was a program officer for information infrastructure in the human genome project. At the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, he served as a vice president for fifteen years.

Technologist

Robbins has been involved with information technology since writing his first Fortran program as a college student. At NSF he was the first program officer for database activities in the life sciences. At JHU he held an appointment in the CS department and served as director of the informatics core for the Genome Data Base. At the FHCRC he was VP for Information Technology.

Publisher

While still at Michigan State, Robbins started his first publishing venture, founding a small company that addressed the short-run publishing needs of instructors in very large undergraduate classes. For more than 20 years, Robbins has been operating The Electronic Scholarly Publishing Project, a web site dedicated to the digital publishing of critical works in science, especially classical genetics.

Speaker

Robbins is well-known for his speaking abilities and is often called upon to provide keynote or plenary addresses at international meetings. For example, in July, 2012, he gave a well-received keynote address at the Global Biodiversity Informatics Congress, sponsored by GBIF and held in Copenhagen. The slides from that talk can be seen HERE.

Facilitator

Robbins is a skilled meeting facilitator. He prefers a participatory approach, with part of the meeting involving dynamic breakout groups, created by the participants in real time: (1) individuals propose breakout groups; (2) everyone signs up for one (or more) groups; (3) the groups with the most interested parties then meet, with reports from each group presented and discussed in a subsequent plenary session.

Designer

Robbins has been engaged with photography and design since the 1960s, when he worked for a professional photography laboratory. He now prefers digital photography and tools for their precision and reproducibility. He designed his first web site more than 20 years ago and he personally designed and implemented this web site. He engages in graphic design as a hobby.

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Collection of publications by R J Robbins

Reprints and preprints of publications, slide presentations, instructional materials, and data compilations written or prepared by Robert Robbins. Most papers deal with computational biology, genome informatics, using information technology to support biomedical research, and related matters.

Research Gate page for R J Robbins

ResearchGate is a social networking site for scientists and researchers to share papers, ask and answer questions, and find collaborators. According to a study by Nature and an article in Times Higher Education , it is the largest academic social network in terms of active users.

Curriculum Vitae for R J Robbins

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Curriculum Vitae for R J Robbins

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