Cysteine dependence in Lactobacillus iners constitutes a novel therapeutic target to modify the vaginal microbiota

Seth M. Bloom, Mafunda Na, Woolston Bm, Hayward Mr, Frempong Jf, Abai Ab, Jie Xu, Mitchell Aj,Xavier Westergaard,Hussain Fa,Nondumiso Xulu,Mary Dong, Dong Kl,Thandeka Gumbi,X Ceasar, Rice Jk,Namit Choksi,Nasreen Ismail,Thumbi Ndung’u, Ghebremichael Ms,EP Balskus, Mitchell Cm, Kwon Ds

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)(2021)

引用 0|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
Vaginal microbiota composition affects several important reproductive health outcomes. Lactobacillus crispatus-dominant bacterial communities have favorable associations whereas anaerobe-dominant communities deficient of lactobacilli are linked to poor outcomes, including bacterial vaginosis (BV). Lactobacillus iners, the most abundant vaginal species worldwide, has adverse associations compared to L. crispatus, but standard metronidazole treatment for BV promotes L. iners-dominance, likely contributing to post-treatment relapse. L. iners is under-studied because it fails to grow in standard Lactobacillus media in vitro. Here we trace this in vitro phenotype to a species-specific cysteine requirement associated with limitations in cysteine-related transport mechanisms and show that vaginal cysteine concentrations correlate with Lactobacillus abundance in vivo. We demonstrate that cystine uptake inhibitors selectively impede L. iners growth and that combining an inhibitor with metronidazole thus promotes L. crispatus dominance of defined BV-like communities. These findings identify a novel target for therapeutic vaginal microbiota modulation to improve reproductive health.
更多
查看译文
关键词
lactobacillus iners,vaginal microbiota,cysteine,novel therapeutic target
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要