Differences in the composition of vaginal microbial communities found in healthy Caucasian and black women
Xia Zhou,Celeste J. Brown,Zaid Abdo,Catherine C. Davis,Melanie A. Hansmann,Paul Joyce,James A. Foster,Larry J. Forney +7 more
TL;DR: It is postulate that because of differences in composition, not all vaginal communities are equally resilient, and that differences in the vaginal microbiota of Caucasian and black women may at least partly account for known disparities in the susceptibility of women in these racial groups to bacterial vaginosis and sexually transmitted diseases.
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Abstract: The maintenance of a low pH in the vagina through the microbial production of lactic acid is known to be an important defense against infectious disease in reproductive age women. Previous studies have shown that this is largely accomplished through the metabolism of lactic acid bacteria, primarily species of Lactobacillus. Despite the importance of this defense mechanism to women's health, differences in the species composition of vaginal bacterial communities among women have not been well defined, nor is it known if and how these differences might be linked to differences in the risk of infection. In this study, we defined and compared the species composition of vaginal bacterial communities in 144 Caucasian and black women in North America. This was carried out based on the profiles of terminal restriction fragments of 16S rRNA genes, and phylogenetic analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequences of the numerically dominant microbial populations. Among all the women sampled, there were eight major kinds of vaginal communities ('supergroups') that occurred in the general populace at a frequency of at least 0.05 (P=0.99). From the distribution of these supergroups among women, it was possible to draw several conclusions. First, there were striking, statistically significant differences (P=0.0) in the rank abundance of community types among women in these racial groups. Second, the incidence of vaginal communities in which lactobacilli were not dominant was higher in black women (33%) as compared to Caucasian women (7%). Communities not dominated by lactobacilli had Atopobium and a diverse array of phylotypes from the order Clostridiales. Third, communities dominated by roughly equal numbers of more than one species of Lactobacillus were rare in black women, but common in Caucasian women. We postulate that because of these differences in composition, not all vaginal communities are equally resilient, and that differences in the vaginal microbiota of Caucasian and black women may at least partly account for known disparities in the susceptibility of women in these racial groups to bacterial vaginosis and sexually transmitted diseases.
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Citations
Explaining the Black-White Disparity in Preterm Birth: A Consensus Statement From a Multi-Disciplinary Scientific Work Group Convened by the March of Dimes
Paula Braveman,Tyan Parker Dominguez,Wylie Burke,Siobhan M. Dolan,David K. Stevenson,Fleda Mask Jackson,James W. Collins,Deborah A. Driscoll,Terinney Haley,Julia Acker,Gary M. Shaw,Edward R.B. McCabe,William W. Hay,Kent Thornburg,Dolores Acevedo-Garcia,José F. Cordero,Paul H. Wise,Gina Legaz,Kweli Rashied-Henry,Jordana Frost,Sarah Verbiest,Lisa Waddell +21 more
- 02 Sep 2021
TL;DR: In 2017, the March of Dimes convened a workgroup with biomedical, clinical, and epidemiologic expertise to review knowledge of the causes of the persistent Black-White disparity in preterm birth (PTB) as mentioned in this paper.
Gynecologic health and disease in relation to the microbiome of the female reproductive tract
TL;DR: The vaginal microbiome may fluctuate during various states of health, such as during the menstrual cycle or after menopause, and there may be differences in the vaginal microbiome between women of different ethnicities.
118
•Journal Article
Unraveling the Dynamics of the Human Vaginal Microbiome.
Kenetta L. Nunn,Larry J. Forney +1 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that other bacterial populations in vaginal communities could also be sources of amylase in addition to (or instead of) the host.
118
Anaerobes and Bacterial Vaginosis in Pregnancy: Virulence Factors Contributing to Vaginal Colonisation
TL;DR: New available information regarding possible factors contributing to the establishment of the BV vaginal biofilm are reviewed, the proposed role of anaerobic microbial species recently detected by new culture-independent methods are examined, and developments related to the effects of BV on human pregnancy are discussed.
The role of metagenomics in understanding the human microbiome in health and disease.
TL;DR: The link between the human microbiota (focusing on the intestinal, vaginal, skin, and airway body sites) and health from this ecological point of view is summarized, highlighting the contribution of metagenomics in the advance of this field.
114
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